Bradford City's fate as a Division One club will be decided at a meeting of Football League chairmen tomorrow.
Fans of the club are to travel to London to campaign for the chairmen to approve the club's bid to regain its division one status.
And the Bradford City Supporters' Trust is urging fans to travel to the capital, claiming the club still faces the threat of expulsion or relegation.
City need to win support from a majority of the committee which is made up of six club chairmen and two League officials.
Geoffrey Richmond, the City chairman, said he is confident the club will get the green light at the meeting.
Mr Richmond and the club's administrators Kroll Buchler Phillips will explain to the meeting that the Company Voluntary Arrangement (CVA) was accepted by almost 100 per cent of creditors on Thursday.
They will also explain that the deal will see the club's football creditors paid in full, and they will need to prove that the club has the finances in place to start and finish the new season.
But Chris Hawkridge, chairman of the Supporters' Trust, said there is a "very real threat" some club chairmen would make their feelings about City's actions clear. "There are one or two people upset from the point of view that Bradford City have taken an easy option and will be allowed to carry on," he said. "It is therefore important that anyone who can get down tomorrow does, and peacefully shows their support for City continuing as a First Division club."
City's survival at Thursday's creditors' meeting was welcomed by many Division One chairmen, including representatives from City's opening-day rivals Wolves.
Roy Whalley, chief executive of Walsall, who will be represented at tomorrow's meeting, welcomed City's survival. He said: "It would have been bad news for a First Division club to have gone out of business."
Millwall chairman Theo Paphitis believes the chairmen will back the deal, even if they do not approve of City's actions. "I have not always seen eye to eye with Geoffrey Richmond but this is about Bradford City and it is great news that they have got through this," he said.
"I can understand some chairmen thinking Bradford City took a gamble and lost and did not have to pay the price. But everything that the club has done has been within the law."
A spokesman for the Football League confirmed the panel would have the power to reject City's return to the League or recommend the club was relegated. However, it is understood such a decision would need to be ratified by a meeting of all 72 League chairmen which may not be possible before the new season kicks off.
The T&A understands the meeting will take place at the Raddison Hotel in Portland Square, London, at 11am.
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