ACCRINGTON Stanley striker Billy Kee wants to deepen the uncertainty surrounding Notts County by ending their unbeaten home record tomorrow.

The Magpies have been the headline makers of League Two since the summer, when the club took on significant new Middle East backing and appointed former England boss Sven Goran Eriksson as their director of football amid talk of aiming for the Champions League in the next few years.

But ex-England centre back Sol Campbell came and went after just one game – a defeat at Morecambe with the aid of a Paul Mullin goal – and reports were yesterday suggesting that there could be upheaval ahead with Eriksson and executive chairman Peter Trembling rumoured to be mounting a bid to take over the club from the wealthy Munto Finance.

It remains to be seen what that will mean for the big ambitions of the title favourites, who currently lie only fourth in League Two.

But, regardless, Stanley go to Meadow Lane knowing that inflicting Notts County’s first home defeat in the league could grab national headlines.

And Kee, who is currently on loan from home town club Leicester, says the publicity around Notts County this season will provide all the motivation the Reds need.

“It’s a local derby for me, it’s near my house,” said the 19-year-old.

“I’d love to beat them to shut them up for a bit. They’re flashing a bit of money, aren’t they?

“But of course you can’t buy some of the qualities we have.

“What’s our average age at the moment, 20 or 21? Three or four of us are not over 20 and playing in the team.

“We’ve got a great team spirit here, the gaffer urges us on and we’re working really hard.”

Stanley have struggled for cash for most of this season but they go into the game in buoyant mood after Tuesday’s FA Cup win at Barnet – their third straight victory in a run of just one defeat in 11 matches.

The Reds are now 12th in the table and have a game in hand that could put them within two points of the play-offs – and only four behind Notts County.

The Magpies are now managed by former Panathinaikos boss Hans Backe but it is fellow Swede Eriksson who remains the star attraction.

Asked whether it would be nice to pit his wits against Eriksson, Coleman replied: “It might be nice for Sven to pit them against me, mightn’t it?

“There won’t be many harder places to go to than Rochdale and Bury this season and we’ve won both of them.

“Notts County will probably be as hard as those two. We’ve already proved we can do it against top sides, so let’s hope we can keep doing it.”

And Kee, whose loan expires at the end of the month, is determined to go on a goal spree after regaining his place in the team with a scoring performance on his birthday at Burton last week.

“The aim is to get some goals before Christmas,” he said.

“I don’t know what the situation will be at the end of my loan yet. I’ll sit down with the gaffer at the time.

“If I start not getting in the team it’s a different situation, but at the moment I’d love to stay if I’m still playing.”