Hereford United's plight has featured in several national papers over the past few days.
Here's how the Daily Mail reported the story:
Ronnie Radford’s rocket stunned Newcastle United and created an FA Cup legend that is still recognised today with an award handed out before each final at Wembley to the team who can claim that season’s greatest shock.
But that stand, the last renovation at the ageing ground, has been a lonely place on match days this season.
Crowds are down and cash has dried up. Hereford are one place above the relegation zone in the Skrill Conference Premier but, more importantly, on the brink of oblivion.This week it was revealed that the club need to raise £78,000 by April 7 to meet a tax demand - or face being issued with a winding-up order.
For a club in League One as recently as 2009, their slide out of the Football League two years ago has proved tougher to deal with than ever imagined.
Gone is the £750,000 assistance each year from the League, replaced by an annual sum of just £48,000 from the Conference, plus a parachute payment last year of £250,000.
If not quite dropping off the face of a cliff, revenue streams have certainly sped quickly down a very steep hill. Average attendances have dwindled from 3,421 in 2007-08 to 1,658 this season.
Chairman David Keyte, whose father John was chief superintendent in the city when Newcastle, Malcolm Macdonald and all, came to town in 1972, has attempted to cut costs.
Around £800,000 has been slashed off a £1.2million wage bill in two years. The playing squad is threadbare... and they have not been paid in full for nearly two months.
Results have suffered with no wins in 11 games leaving Hereford four points above Aldershot in the final relegation spot.
Manager Martin Foyle and assistant Andy Porter, who are believed to have gone without pay since Christmas, were dismissed last week and replaced by youth boss Peter Beadle.
Radford, now 70, said: ‘Obviously it’s painful at the moment, the club is in a really desperate situation. I feel so sad. All we can hope is that things can get turned round.’Radford knows a thing or two about beating the odds. It was his goal, a wondrous strike that shook the country and launched the career of a young John Motson, which levelled an FA Cup third round tie with First Division Newcastle five minutes from time.
Thousands of fans flocked on to the muddy pitch as he celebrated, arms aloft.
When Ricky George came off the substitutes’ bench to win the tie in extra-time, Hereford forever had a place in English football folklore