Finally, Luton Town is back!

By dinoweb / Roar Guru

At the age of 17 in 1983 I first played club football for a local under-18 team.

As part of a fund raiser for the club, every player chipped in a couple of dollars towards a raffle of sorts that I never fully understood. The raffle involved randomly drawing the name of a team from the then Division One and the results of that club somehow determined the outcome of the raffle.

I hoped to get my “team” Liverpool, but drew some side I’d never heard of, the newly promoted Luton Town FC. I’ve been a fan ever since.

It’s never been boring being a Hatters fan. The infamous “plastic pitch”, the West Ham riot and the following ban on away fans, just to mention a few incidents, and most years either fighting relegation or promotion.

We beat Arsenal to win the League Cup in 1988, missed out on a place in Europe thanks to the Heysel disaster, and lost to Nottingham Forest in the League Cup final the next year.

Luton dropped out of the top league in 1992, the season before it became the Premiership, and spent the next 12 years moving up and down the lower leagues. The Hatters reached the FA Cup semi-final almost 20 years ago to the day in 1994, their one and only game I’ve managed to attend live.

In 2005-06 Luton was again flying high in the Championship, but like the Titanic, was unaware of the iceberg that was about to sink the club.

A dodgy owner saw the club enter administration, suffer a 10-point deduction, and back-to-back demotions. At the time, one of the managers complained about the practice of bungs (dodgy player transfer payments) in the league, including at Luton.

In 2008-09 season Luton was relegated for the third year in a row thanks to a massive 30-point deduction, partly due to “improper financial dealings” bought to light by the previous manager. For the first time in 83 years Luton was out of the professional football leagues.

The massive points deduction has never been satisfactorily explained to the clubs supporters. Those responsible had long since departed, and other clubs have since been found to have had similar issues without such severe deductions.

In the meantime, the club was taken over by a financial group made up mostly of genuine club supporters.

Today, five years and five managers after being banished to the non-professional leagues, Luton has won the Conference Premier title, and automatic promotion back into League Two with three games to spare, thanks in no small part to a mid-season 26-game unbeaten run.

There was one defining moment this season.

After years of frustration, it took little for the fans on game day to turn against the team. Other clubs knew this and would try to use it to their advantage.

After a slow start to the season, at one home match, one fan let his feelings be heard in no uncertain terms. The team went on to win the game, and afterwards club captain Ronnie Henry personally confronted the fan.

In a masterstroke of PR, the fan was invited to training to see how hard the players worked, and was then invited to the player huddle at the next home game. This simple act united all fans behind the team, and Kenilworth Road has been a fortress ever since.

With a good manager, a relatively young squad, a number of genuinely high quality signings, and an ambitious, but responsible club management in place, the Town is a club finally on the way up again.

It’s a great day to be a Hatter!

The Crowd Says:

2014-04-18T13:09:10+00:00

Tom

Guest


Boston uniteds going up to the conference this year hopefully! UP THE PILGRIMS!

2014-04-18T01:21:49+00:00

DinoWeb

Guest


Thanks vliw, you are right of course. My bad!

2014-04-18T00:29:43+00:00

rusty0256

Guest


Luton Town became the home of Socceroo '74 World Cup player Adrian 'Noddy' Alston and I had the pleasure of watching him play there a couple of times when I was living in the UK. Unfortunately he was only there for a season so my full allegiance to the club was brief, but I continued to keep an eye on the boys in orange from that time on. Good to see they are on their way back up the leagues, long may their march continue.

2014-04-17T23:44:14+00:00

Peter budd

Guest


I am really pleased to see the hatters back and am hopeful we will see Cambridge United too this season. funniest memory of visiting Kenilworth Rd in the 1970's was being herded onto a football special back to Kings Cross St Pancreas one Saturday afternoon. Trouble was we had one of those motor car thingies that the local constabulary wouldn't consider and so the journey home that night was a criss cross of railway journeys and a lift back the next day, a search for my car ( it was still there) and then home again! But it was great to watch mark stein, Ricky hill and co and I hope the club climbs its way through the lower leagues and reaches the EPL again sometime soon.

2014-04-17T19:36:43+00:00

vliw

Guest


It was Millwall, in the quarter final of the cup that was the riot you are talking about, not the hammers!

2014-04-17T10:06:22+00:00

Neil

Guest


A very good read my friend- enjoyable..........My poor old mum died mid September last year. She was a very staunch supporter of Luton. Right up to her dying day the first thing she would ask when she was visited was- "Did we win" I know she would be elated. The weirdest thing was, soon after her death the Town went on that long unbeaten run.............All in all, three straight up places to Div 1 next season, they will accomplish that with ease............Great stuff.

2014-04-17T05:02:18+00:00

fadida

Guest


Really enjoyed the article. I've followed Man U since the late 70's but my first love is football. Reading about the "little" clubs who make up the majority of leagues is much more interesting than another (pretty much any) United article (Moyes out! btw). I remember Ricky Hill and the Stein brothers, the thrilling win v Arsenal in the LC final. Antic scoring v City (?) to secure survival. I loved watching games on the plastic pitch. There always seemed to be plenty of goals scored, and unpredictability. My imagination or were the nets very shallow? Mick Harford! Ah Mick Harford. imagine playing against him on the plastic. You'd be skun like a rabbit by the end :)

2014-04-17T00:39:51+00:00

mahonjt

Guest


A great read - thanks mate.

2014-04-16T22:15:14+00:00

ciudadmarron

Guest


Went to kenilworth rd once and saw the infamous walk through the houses and backyards to get to the stand. Brilliant.

2014-04-16T22:03:34+00:00

Melange

Guest


love reading pieces like this, thanks dino, great contribution If I remember right my team, Liverpool, never liked the plastic pitch.

2014-04-16T21:19:11+00:00

brisvegas

Guest


Good onya, dinoweb. Hoping for my home town club to come up with Luton - Gateshead, that is - via the play offs. Sorry to hear about the Liverpool affliction.

2014-04-16T15:39:06+00:00

Johnno

Guest


I like it Dino.

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