With Terry Skiverton shaping the club his way, Yeovil FanZoner Ben Barrett is still not sure what to expect.
Yeovil ring the changes, but will Skiverton bring success?
Glovers legend Terry Skiverton is now in charge and as happy as he is about that, Ben Barrett is not sure what tit will mean on the pitch...
Without a shadow of a doubt, this season could either make or break the years of hard work that has been put in by a number of people at Huish Park.
The hard work started in 2002, when the FA Trophy glistened away in our trophy cabinet, add to the that the Football Conference Title a year later and the League Two crown soon after and we are taking shape as a Football League team to be reckoned with.
One man who has been there for all of it, is Terry Skiverton, once just "another" signing, centre-half, former captain and now... gaffer.
Skivo will take his first full season as a manager and has already rung the changes; staff and players shown the exit doors worried many fans but since then a rebuilding process has begun.
He has his own team with him, his own staff and a loyal backing of fans.
Influential
Players like Paul Warne, Lee Peltier and some influential loanees have all left Yeovil over the summer, but already the squad is beggining to bolster with an exciting mix of youth and experience.
Stefan Stam has answered the cry for Skivo's replacement at the back, while Sam Williams has come in from Villa and Danny Hutchins from Spurs - a Premier League upbringing never killed anyone.
With links to Tottenham and Bristol City amougst others, the loan market will once again be used and abused for all that it is worth, and who are we to complain?
The smallest budget in League One? Probably. The most exciting club for its fans? I would say so.
The goalkeeper situation had concerned many fans, who could possibly replace the likes of Chris Weale and Josh Wagenaar? Skivo has pulled another rabbit out of the hat and pulled in Alex McCarthy and Richard Martin, two young exciting stoppers.
What do fans want this season? To put a target on Skiverton's already heavily-pressured shoulders would be foolish, but the style of football has already improved, the team has an attacking flare about it and fans are hopeful.
If they are honest survival is the key, but who knows? We made the play-offs in 2007... why not 2010?
Will it be survival or the play-offs? What do you make of the rebuilding going on under the legend that is Terry Skiverton? Join in the FanZone debate by filling in the feedback form below...