[11] The following season, the Archers started in the 1952 Speedway Southern League but ran into financial difficulties, with MD Stan Lish needing to raise £1,000 to survive.
[13] Eleven years after the last speedway in Long Eaton the "Archers" name was again used when the track re-opened in 1963, with Reg Fearman entering the team in the Provincial League.
[16] Fearman and fellow promoter Ron Wilson continued to attempt to make the Archers a leading team with the signings of Anders Michanek, Jim Lightfoot and John Boulger but results were not great again.
[17] In 1969 a new promoter and former Leicester rider Ivor Brown re-opened the speedway with a new team name "Long Eaton Rangers", who competed in British League Division Two.
[19] The track opened again in 1979 under the promotion of Dan McCormick and his decision to call the team the "Nottingham Outlaws" upset the supporters club.
In 1984, former rider Vic White was brought in as the team manager and he signed Graham Drury and Chris Pidcock to support Perks, Paul Stead and David Tyler.
[26][27] In early 1998 it was announced that the stadium was to be sold (by receivers Grant Thornton, who had control of it since 1995) for housing development and the club would have to vacate immediately.
[30] The Long Eaton Invaders were revived in 2011, competing in the amateur status Midland League, sharing the Leicester Lions' new track in Beaumont Park Stadium for home matches.