Football fans are waiting for result of the latest round of financially troubled Bolton Wanderers’ fight for survival. Lawyers representing Bolton are due to appear at the high court in London on Monday after tax officials pressed for the 142-year-old club to be wound up.

On 18 January a specialist judge heard that Bolton owed Revenue & Customs £2.2m. The registrar, Michael Briggs, gave the club until 22 February to find a solution.

Following the hearing a Bolton spokesman indicated they were aiming to find a buyer or raise money from asset sales.

The barrister Hilary Stonefrost, who represented the club, had told the court negotiations were taking place with prospective buyers and moves were being made to raise funds. On Friday it was revealed the club’s training ground had been sold to Wigan.

Three separate parties are understood to be in the running to take over. The billionaire investment banker Roger Tamraz has emerged as the latest party keen to take control at the Macron Stadium, while the Sports Shield consortium, fronted by the former striker Dean Holdsworth, and the Bolton Wanderers Supporters Trust have also held talks with the club.

Supporters saw Bolton, who were relegated from the Premier League in 2012, climb from the foot of the Championship on Saturday. A Zach Clough goal earned them a 1-1 home draw against Queens Park Rangers.

Eleven years ago, under Sam Allardyce, Bolton finished sixth in the Premier League and qualified for European football. They reached the FA Cup semi-finals under Owen Coyle in 2011.

Bolton were one of 12 founding members of the Football League in 1888. They have won the FA Cup on four occasions – the last time in 1958 – and once had Nat Lofthouse, one of the most famous names in the history of the English game, in their ranks.