Eastleigh tomorrow aim to end a shocking home run that has contributed to fears of a possible relegation battle.

The club, now under their fifth manager of a shambolic campaign, have not won in front of their own fans since October 25 - 136 days ago.

Since beating Torquay United 3-0 at the Silverlake Stadium, the team have played nine National League games and two FA Cup ties - and failed to win any of them.

Eastleigh also have failed to taste success in any of their last 10 league games - picking up just four points in that period to nosedive to within eight points of the relegation area.

A remarkable turnover of players - 33 players arriving since last May and almost 30 leaving in the same period - has undoubtedly contributed to a lack of any consistency.

The Spitfires have picked up only one league success in 13 games since November 22 - a 1-0 win at Boreham Wood on New Year’s Eve.

That was Martin Allen’s sole league victory in a miserable 84-day spell that ended recently and which heralded the return of Richard Hill as director of football.

Hill, of course, is well known to the Silverlake faithful - he was in charge when the Spitfires won promotion to the top tier of English non league football by winning the Conference South title in 2013/14.

He then guided the club to a sensational play-off place in their debut Conference Premier season - before being sacked just a few games into the 2015/16 campaign.

Hill is Eastleigh’s fifth manager of the current season.

His successor, Chris Todd, was sacked after just four games while the vastly experienced Ronnie Moore resigned for personal reasons towards the end of November.

Allen was then brought in from Barnet, and allowed to bring in 13 players in his ultimately shambolic 84 days in charge.

Now Hill has to not only try and improve results, but also restore some stability in a dressing room which has suffered from a revolving door approach since the end of last term.

Tomorrow Eastleigh welcome Barrow looking for their long overdue first win of 2017.

The squad Hill will send into action in a bid to get that much-needed success bears little resemblance to the one that beat Torquay almost five months ago.

No wonder, when you look at the incredible ins and outs of 2016/17.

In all, four different managers - Todd, Moore, Allen and Hill - have signed an astonishing 33 players.

One of them - Richard Duffy - never actually appeared for the club while another - popular left back Michael Green - returned recently after leaving a few days earlier during Allen’s reign.

Chairman Stewart Donald recently apologised to supporters after sacking Allen,.

“I can only unreservedly apologise for what I have put our fans, players and staff through this season,” he said in a statement. “I genuinely thought all decisions made were right at the time but it is clear I have got this wrong. It has affected everyone’s enjoyment, none more than myself”

Donald had to hold his hands up.

After all, he was the one who allowed Todd to bring in 14 new signings last summer - only to then sack him after just four games.

Todd signed David Pipe, Jake Howells, Ayo Obileye, Reda Johnson, Adam Dugdale, Scott Wilson, Mikael Mandron, Adam Dawson, Ryan Cresswell, Jason Taylor, Ryan Bird, Ryan Huddart, Connor Essam and Duffy Of those, Pipe, Mandron, Dawson, Bird, Huddart and Essam have either left or are out on loan - and Duffy never played, staging a U-turn to sign for Notts County instead.

Following Todd’s sacking, Moore brought in goalkeeper Ryan Clarke, veteran striker Jamie Cureton, Derby loanee Alefe Santos, Bondz N’Gala - for a club record £60,000 - and Ross Stearn.

Cureton left shortly after Moore resigned, while N’Gala left by mutual consent after just nine league appearances.

Allen’s appointment was the catalyst for another remarkable signing spree.

Former Spitfires midfielder Ben Strevens - who had been caretaker manager for one game after Todd’s dismissal - returned as he knew Allen well from their time together at Barnet and Gillingham.

Within a fortnight of his arrival, he had brought in Wolves’ Hakeem Odofin and Doncaster’s Tyle Garrett on loan.

Allen returned to former club Barnet to sign Sam Togwell, Gavin Hoyte, Sam Muggleton and Graham Stack.

Experienced strikers Darius Henderson and Craig McAllister arrived in the New Year, while former Wolves youngster Mekhi McLeod was another new signing.

On the final day of the January transfer window, Allen made two more loan signings - Cherries youngster Sam Matthews and Pompey’s Ben Close. In addition, Chinua Cole arrived from Staines Town.

Those are the players that have come in.

These are the ones who have left ...

At the end of last season, loan striker Matt Tubbs returned to parent club Portsmouth while a host of players were released.

Defenders Will Evans and Jamie Turley joined Aldershot and Newport respectively, while Josh Payne joined Crawley and ex-Saint Dan Harding and Paul Reid moved to Whitehawk.

Matty Fanimo moved to Margate while goalkeepers Michael Poke and Lewis Noice joined Woking and Winchester respectively.

Jack Midson moved to Braintree and Ross Lafayette joined Dover, while Lee Cook was also released.

Since the start of 2016/17, Ben Strevens has left and come back again, Yemi Odubade has joined Maidstone, Ross Flitney joined Hill at Whitehawk, and Adam Dawson was the first of the summer arrivals to leave in November.

Following Allen’s arrival, Andy Drury moved to Ebbsfleet and Jamie Cureton joined St Albans.

The January transfer window saw a host of departures, with Pipe (loan) and Bird moving to Newport, Joe Partington joining Bristol Rovers, Luke Coulson moving to Barnet, Howells joining Dagenham and young striker Tony Lee making a permanent switch to Gosport Borough.

Then, at the beginning of last month, midfielder Jai Reason - one of last few remaining links to Hill’s 2013/14 Conference South winning squad - left to join Boreham Wood.

McLeod then chose to leave following Hill’s return.

All that upheaval, all those comings and goings, have reduced Eastleigh to a laughing stock in some non league circles.

It’s no laughing matter for Hill, though, as he attempts to sprinkle his managerial fairydust around the club for a second time.

At least a long-overdue home win tomorrow would help put a smile back on the faces of the Eastleigh fans - as well as Donald’s.