Hillingdon Borough FC are still very much alive and kicking but need your support, according to club owner Dee Dhand.

Obituaries were last week once again being penned for a club who, in a previous incarnation, reached the 1971 FA Trophy final and twice applied to join the Football League.

A series of tweets suggested the club was resigned from the Spartan South Midlands League, but it turned out to be more a cry for help than a final nail in the coffin.

This first tweet was published last Wednesday

The club's plight even came to national attention when Everton winger Yannick Bolaise, who started his career at Hillingdon, lent his moral support .

Dhand said: “It had to come out. When you're putting money in and working 18 hours a day every day and getting nothing back, I'd had enough.

“We're not short of money, it was never a financial thing, but we're getting no support from the league or the community, and it was all getting too much.

Things still weren't looking good when this second tweet was sent

“I asked the league how much it would cost for us to pull out as I couldn't take it any more, and before I knew it it was all over Twitter.

“We had a fantastic response, I didn't know how much this club is still loved in the community, probably due to our history.

“But we're still here, still going, and hopefully everything will work out. The league have been understanding, but more support from the community would be great.

But there was a u-turn later that same evening

“It just felt that something wasn't right, especially with all the effort I'm putting in. We used to have a large committee but a lot of them have got too old for it now.

“The management team have been very supportive too. I just feel like I need a rest now, but we'll keep fighting as a club.”

Dhand, who has been on the club's committee for 16 years and owner for the past decade, was the one who in fact first spotted £25million man Bolaise's potential.

Boro old boy: Yannick Bolasie

She added: “Yannick was playing for our U18s. When the first team played away from home the rest of the committee would go, while I'd stay and do stuff around the club and watch the youngsters play.

“Yannick always stood out, and the U18s manager kept saying we had to get him into the first team, but it was about persuading the whole committee. It was lovely to hear that he still has a place for us in his heart though.”

Hillingdon, who sit mid-table in Division One of the Spartan South Midlands, saw their games frozen off on Saturday and Tuesday night, but are due to travel to high-flying Harpenden this Saturday.

Rich history: Boro were FA Trophy finalists in 1971