FANS favourites John Mills, Ryan Green and Pablo Haysham could be leaving Edgar Street if the club can't meet their contract demands.

The trio have met manager Pete Beadle in the last few weeks but a 'disappointing' budget has meant that their offers haven't been accepted and their futures uncertain.

"What they're asking for isn't massively unreasonable for what they have achieved but we just can't meet it with our budget," said Beadle.

"I'm disappointed with the budget as there is very little to reward the players who have won promotion with us. It's what we have to work with and we can't sacrifice the team for one or two players. If we give them extra then we have got to take money from other places.

"Ryan (Green) is the same and he has been here a long time and is a stalwart. We are also in a position where we can't get close to what he is asking for. I think the three are asking for the going rate for this level of football and we can't match that demand.

"It's now a waiting game to see what they decide to do. It's not ideal for me as I want the three of them here but my hands of tied with them three. "We are also still waiting for Will (Puddy) and Elliot (Richards). It has been a tough couple of weeks as for what the players have achieved unfortunately I've not be able to reward them with what they deserve but it's what I've got to keep working with."

The following players have agreed to stay at Hereford next year after accepting deals: Martin Horsell, Calvin Dinsley, Billy Murphy, Jamie Bird, Lance Smith, Mike Symons, Harry Franklin, Mike McGrath, Jordan Liburd and Keyon Reffell.

Beadle will remain on a rolling contract this season as he has been for the last three years.

His assistant Steve Jenkins is on a non contract basis along with Jonny Evans and Roger Lloyd.

While goalkeeper coach Rhys Evans travels from Bournemouth to work with the squad which Beadle says he does for 'next to nothing'.

Beadle is urging fans to buy season tickets to help increase the budget and said that 3,000 season tickets sales would help his side to be competitive.

He added: "If we want to be competitive and continue the momentum then the figure we need for the club to give us a budget which is competitive is 3,000 to give us a chance to continue the work that has been done.

"People need to have a sense of realism as they have a perception that we have an open cheque book, but to have achieved what we have with the budget we have had is incredible.

"We don't pay ridiculous amounts of money and work to a budget. We are not run by one person we raise funds from supporters, the bar and the commercial side.

"It looks like we will have to find one or two rough diamonds to bolster what we've already got. For me that's not ideal as I want to continue the momentum but I think it's going to be the toughest year yet in a division where teams are paying players between £600 and £900 a week and we can't compete with that."