Bury owner Steve Dale claims an incurable form of leukaemia and the degenerative condition acute osteoarthritis leave him “unable to leave my bed, let alone home some days”. However, following increasing criticism from supporters and an open letter from Bury players urging him to sell quickly, Dale insists he will do all he can to save the club. In a statement on Bury’s website, he wrote: “I thought it common knowledge I have an incurable form of leukaemia as well as acute osteoarthritis. This renders me unable to leave my bed, let alone home some days. “I do however work tirelessly till all hours on my computer and phone to save our club.” Dale, though, confirmed manager Ryan Lowe, who guided Bury to promotion to Sky Bet League One, is in talks with Plymouth about taking up the vacant position at Home Park. Dale said: “Leaving the club, clearly not something we want to see but Ryan is a young man starting on his management career and who are we to stop his trajectory if he wants this? “Plymouth asked to speak to him, (which) we sanctioned, but as far as I know he is still with Bury.” The Shakers are facing a winding-up petition as they owe approximately £277,000 to HM Revenue & Customs. A High Court hearing scheduled for last week was adjourned until June 19 to allow Dale, who only took over the club last December, time to find a buyer. Dale though, alleges their financial concerns are the legacy of the previous regime and that cuts to the wage bill are necessary. He said: “The club was bust due to the previous owner’s tenure, in fact turning out as it unfolded to be far worse than anyone could have known. “Nobody would have taken it on, I did and am being vilified by the same few trolls/persons with agenda for sorting a mess that I did not create. “I think I must make this abundantly clear, this is a horrible situation to be in, of course, everybody needs to be paid but the club cannot afford the level of employees it has. “There is no magic wand here, certain people if they genuinely care about the club would have left long ago knowing they were not adding value just draining a dead corpse.” Players who said on Wednesday they have not been paid wages by the club for 12 weeks – the Professional Footballers’ Association stepped in to cover their March salary – stressed the urgency of the situation. Bury finished second in League Two but there are now fears the squad will be broken up, a situation Dale says he wants to avoid. He continued: “It is my priority along with the winding up order to settle the playing staff as fast as we can and I can only apologise for the delay. It’s not what I thought would happen, but if it can go wrong it will at Bury. “We want this resolving as fast as we can and I can assure the players it’s the last thing I want to break up our winning team. “I hope you can allow us to get the past cleared so next season there are no re-occurrences of the last few months, only our cutbacks and prudent financial controls will achieve that.” Topics League 2, Bury Bury “safe” according to chairman Dale Bury players urge owner Steve Dale to walk away from club Four Lincoln players named in PFA League Two Team of the Year Everton to sign Bury starlet Foulds Villa boss Dean Smith: Jack Grealish will cost someone a hell of a lot of money Moore to talk to UEFA boss about ticket allocation Dundee Utd and St Mirren play out goalless stalemate in play-off final first leg Union Berlin draw with Stuttgart to boost bid for Bundesliga place United to face Solskjaer’s hometown team as part of pre-season build-up 7 new rule changes are coming to the Premier League – but are they good or bad? Tottenham star ‘will be a Real Madrid player’ after the Champions League final – report Manchester United 1998/99: still England’s greatest side Quiz! Can you name the title winners of these five European leagues since 1990? Ranked! The 8 best captains in Premier League history