Fans have until Saturday to have their say on the future direction of AFC Wimbledon as the club considers its future.

In a consultation launched in November by The Dons Trust, the not-for-profit owner of the club since its formation in 2002, six possible scenarios were put out to a consultation, which proposes the following range of options:

Option A: Sell the club to a rich owner who can “fast-track” the club to the Premier League;
Option B: Keep the club fan-owned and based in Kingston, where it currently shares a ground with Kingstonian FC;
Option C: Build a club in Merton in partnership with Merton Council and an outside investor;
Option D: Keep the club fan-owned but finding a small ground in Wimbledon with expansion potential;
Option E: Find the best possible expansion site in south-west London, even if not in Wimbledon or Kingston;
Option F: Work with Kingstonian and Kingston Council to develop the current ground as much as possible.

On the club’s website, the explanatory paper says that fans were asked if they could think of another option but there was no “clear pattern” for a seventh option to be made.

This, the club said, indicated these six options covered all the possible hopes for the club.

It said: “The group would like to thank the people who took the time to write to us, give feedback and offer alternative scenarios.

“Having carefully reviewed what has been sent, it was felt that no clear pattern appears to have emerged, and that no one scenario was significantly different from elements of the ones already devised.

“Since a feature of the consensus voting process is that parts of existing scenarios can be combined later, we feel that variations on the existing ones can be incorporated at the next stage, depending on the outcome of the ballot.”

The deadline for returning completed ballots is Saturday, February 5.

For more information email Nicole Hammond on nicole.hammond@thedonstrust.org.

Click here to see the options in detail and here for a copy of the ballot paper.

What direction do you think the club should take? Leave a comment below or email us at newsdesk@wimbledonguardian.co.uk.