To the fans, players and staff, though, this isn't a problem. The mantra at the Broadfield Stadium is that you're either with Crawley or you're against them.
Winfield - Crawley saviour |
As recently as March 2006, the players and staff were made to take a 50% pay cut because of falling attendances and income. The entire squad was put up for sale and the club went into administration after being deducted three points at the end of the season for going over the annual playing budget. Crawley Town almost folded with £1.8m debts.
Five months later, it was announced that the club would fold due to the debts. The club was less than an hour from liquidation but a late agreement allowed them to carry on playing but with a 10 point deduction for entering administration.
With the debt cleared in May 2007, they were deduced six points and a transfer embargo was put in place because of financial irregularities. Almost a year later, Prospect Estate Holdings Limited took control of Crawley after buying it from the SA Group. The club could look to begin the 2008-09 season with no financial problems.
But the club soon found themselves back in the High Court to face a winding-up order in February 2010 because of money owed to HMRC. The case was dismissed after the club managed to prove that the debts had been paid.
Winfield announced later in the year that he had become a majority shareholder of the club and had managed to bring in new investment for the club that saw promotion acquired within a season following a massive influx of players financed by the new-found riches.
Evans - Not a popular figure |
Evans is best known for his infamous spells at Boston United which resulted in receiving a one‑year suspended sentence in 2006 for fraudulently disguising players' wages and bonuses as expenses. The rancour remains.
Whilst Crawley evidently have ambition, there is also an arrogance which has allowed for a great hostility to slowly build against the Sussex side. Given their predicament less than a decade ago, you could be forgiven for thinking that feet would be planted firmly into the ground. This, however, is not the case.
Through to the fifth round of the FA Cup again after a 1-0 win at Championship side Hull City and sat in League Two's promotion places, Crawley have a budget to make some Championship clubs envious whilst the rest of Leagues One and Two, with a few exceptions, look on through green eyes. They continue to dream big but recent success appears to have come at a cost.
Despite getting over £1m from a glamour tie at Old Trafford in last year's FA Cup and making a six-figure profit for the year, the club continues to push financial boundaries. A crippling wage bill that cannot be covered by gate receipts alone means that bids for the better players at the club will have to be taken seriously.
Tubbs - Irreplaceable? |
If Tubbs transfer leaves a significant space in the Crawley squad, the potential of losing two other star players must terrify Evans.
Fellow striker Tyrone Barnett, 26, almost joined Blackpool last week for £900,000 but was unable to agree personal terms whilst the stock of centre half Kyle McFadzean, 24, continues to grow by the week along with his list of admirers. Crawley have, so far, resisted offers but more bids are expected.
The promotion dream could well be in ruins. Although they currently cling onto the final promotion slot in League Two by a point; the barrier between Crawley and 8th place is 9 points. With 22 league games left, there is a chance that selling their best assets could see the Red Devils miss out. The neutrals watch on with baited breath, hoping for the wheels to fall off the Crawley bandwagon.