Three games without a win have perhaps signalled the end of the Lee Bowyer honeymoon period, but most Addicks fans would have expected that anyway.

The main cause of concern seems to centre around the ownership issues, specifically whether Roland Duchatelet will move to sell the club.

With so much uncertainty, it seems that the League One campaign has slipped by the way side.

It certainly seems as though another season in the third-tier beckons, with the Addicks now out of touch with the top six and just a handful of games left to make up the deficit.

Bowyer is caretaker until the end of the season, so a new manager may also be on his way in but that could make pre-season recruitment difficult until he's named. There's been lots of names in the frame, but nothing solid has developed and the end of the campaign is only a couple of weeks away.

All in, fans have learned an awful lot about their club this season, here's three things FLW feel we've all learned about Charlton Athletic

It might seem like a given, but Karl Robinson claimed he had moved on because he felt the new owners would want their own man. Was that entirely true? No news emerged after his departure, other than him turning up at Oxford United, which suggests there was additional motivation.

One thing is absolutely certain, this season had promised so much but the problems in the board room have impacted the on-field progress.

The club's youth team have soldiered not throughout the trouble and it keeps producing good quality young players who might just be the future for the club.

Karlan Ahearne-Grant has gone to Crawley recently and grabbed eight goals in 13 starts, an impressive stat for a player just one division below his parent club. If the summer's transfer policy is affected by the ongoing manager issue, perhaps they can rely on their younger players after all.

Crowds are tumbling and the change at the top needs to come sooner, rather than later. The play-off assault is testament to the strength of character in the playing staff and the management team, but it can't be sustained forever.

9,865 turned out to watch them battle to a 0-0 draw with Fleetwood recently, a figure that underlines how fans are reacting to the debacle. The season before their owner took the reins, they averaged 18,500.

Even in their first League One season under Duchatelet they averaged 17,401.  Something must change fast, for the sake of the loyal supporters of Charlton Athletic.