NathStPaul Delboy we would be very attractive to a potential new manager there is only our and Derbys stadium which are modern, we have the best academy facilities in championship let alone Division 1. We would be seen as a big fish in Division 1.
Division 1 doesn't exist. HTH.
Also Bolton and Shrewsbury have perfectly adequate modern stadiums. HTH.
You could put Blackpool in that category - with their stadium being completely redeveloped since 2000 (albeit not in one go). Wigan would be in that category too. While Shrewsbury's ground is new (as it Burton's), I wouldn't put it in the same category as us, Derby, Bolton, Blackpool or Wigan.
On Delboy's core point, we're in a similar boat to our last season at this level: only us, Huddersfield, Wigan and Stoke had stadia which would be considered average-to-good Championship level facilities. One of the big draws for players will be the training facilities, which must be the best in the division (with the possible exception of Derby).
Another difference is we've spent the past twenty years in the top two divisions, with three Premier League seasons. We're certainly a bigger club now than we were in 2002 - and we were already seen as a big fish in 2002.
The only thing is there are more clubs who are big enough to become regular mid-table (minimum) Championship-level clubs now than there were in 2002: Derby, Charlton, Portsmouth, Bolton, Sheffield Wednesday (if they lose the play-off final).
In 2002, we had the highest average attendance with 14,115 - closely followed by Stoke (13,966); only Cardiff, QPR, Bristol City and Huddersfield got over 10,000. The season just gone saw six clubs get higher averages than we did in 2002 - at least two have been promoted; eight were over 10,000 (Derby, Ipswich, Sheff Wed, Bolton, Portsmouth, Plymouth, Charlton, Barnsley). Wigan got 10,000 last time they were in League One, Blackpool got 8,800, so I imagine there will still be three or four clubs that will have a higher average than us (although the depends on how well we do next season).