Harford: Hatters can hold heads high

13 April 2009 19:39
A goalless draw against Chesterfield, combined with wins for Grimsby and Chester, meant that Luton - who were deducted 30 points at the start of the season - will be playing in the Blue Square Premier in August. Harford said: "It was never inevitable but it was always going to be very difficult in terms of where we were with the penalty points. "I've said to the players, 100% it's not their fault. They are a fantastic bunch of lads who have put their necks on the line and their careers on the line for Luton Town Football Club and they can walk out of here with their heads held high. "It's quite clear that the past incumbents of the club are the ones to blame. The penalty points were a massive burden and we just couldn't overcome it. "At five minutes to five on the 13th of April, that's the rebirth of Luton Town Football Club and there are a lot of people worse off than we are. "The benchmark is Doncaster Rovers. They went down but they came back and they're now in the Championship with a new ground. "That's what we'll be aiming to do and I just feel for the fans as well as the players because they don't deserve what they've had to put up with. "The game today wasn't irrelevant because if we'd have won we'd have still been in with a chance. "In the second half there was only one team that wanted to win it but we couldn't find the cutting edge that we had at Wembley and that's been the story of our season really at home." Luton chairman Nick Owen added: "We're shattered really but it was always predictable from day one that we were going to have an unbelievably difficult challenge ahead. "If you take away the 30-point deduction, 24 hours before the first game we still had 11 TBCs (to be confirmed) on the team sheet. "But we assembled a squad which coped admirably given the circumstances. We were given our penalty to preserve the integrity of the Football League and hopefully that integrity has been preserved - that's all that matters. "This club has become a tighter knit community because of this, as shown by the 40,000 we took to Wembley. "We're much stronger psychologically, spiritually and financially. We're not going out of existence, which looked like might be happening at one point, we're just going to be playing in a different league and as the fans sang, Luton Town will never die."

Source: Team_Talk