SWINDON Town owner Clem Morfuni says his one and only wish for the season is that the club remains in League Two come May.

Town suffered relegation from League One last season, and many feared a repeat would be on the cards if a new owner was not in place before the beginning of the new campaign.

Despite the personable Australian having been confirmed as the club’s new custodian on Wednesday, a mammoth task remains in front of not only Morfuni but all at Swindon Town if the club is to come back from a nightmare situation.

Morfuni has already made some early steps in repairing the damage caused by previous owner Lee Power, including the appointment of a new CEO, Rob Angus, head coach, Ben Garner, and director of football, Ben Chorley.

At the club’s unveiling of all four positions on Thursday, Town’s owner was asked what his ambition for the coming season was on the pitch.

Morfuni simply said: “Stay in League Two. That’s our goal for this season, staying in League Two. And then we’ll work out where we go and how we do it from there.

“At the moment, League Two is our priority, sustaining what we have, creating stability, and increasing fan engagement.”

The word “unity” was uttered countless times by all three present members of the Town hierarchy at Thursday’s press conference, but none more so than Morfuni.

Previously involved in the club as a minority shareholder, the Australian repeatedly called for unity from the club’s fan – particularly in the early weeks and months when there may not be instantly-recognisable progress on the pitch or off it.

Morfuni said: “We want the supporters to stick together. We want to support the supporters and we want the supporters to support us.

“We want to respect our supporters by being as open and as transparent as possible, and we want to be there for them as they will hopefully be there for us.

“Hopefully, the results go our way early on and we have a feel-good factor from the start. It will be hard if we are losing, but we’re on the back foot at the moment.

“We’re trying to scramble to make sure we get there, and we will get there. We want to be as open and transparent as possible from the start so hopefully people can see what we’re trying to do.”