List of Luton Town F.C. records and statistics

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Fred Hawkes holds the record for most Luton Town league appearances, with 509.

Luton Town Football Club is an English professional football club based in Luton, Bedfordshire. The club was founded in 1885 and became the first professional club in southern England in 1891. Luton Town have played at all professional levels of English football and are currently contesting the 2023–24 season in the first tier, Premier League. Luton Town have been Football League members for 104 seasons: from 1897 to 1900; from 1920 to 2009, and from 2014 to 2023.

The record for most games played for the club is held by

Bob Morton, who made 562 appearances between 1946 and 1964. Gordon Turner is the club's record goalscorer, with 276 goals across his 450 appearances for Luton. Mal Donaghy made 58 appearances for Northern Ireland and so is the Luton Town player who has gained the most caps while with the club. The highest transfer fee paid by the club is the £2 million paid to Barnsley for striker Carlton Morris in 2022, and the highest fees received is the £8 million fee paid by Leicester City for Luton-born James Justin, in 2019. The highest attendance recorded at Kenilworth Road was 30,069 for the visit of Blackpool in 1959. One Football League record is held by a Luton Town player—the 10 goals scored by forward Joe Payne in 1936 against Bristol Rovers
is the most scored in any Football League match by a single player.

All records are correct as of the 2022–23 season.

Honours and achievements

The Luton Town squad of 1897–98, which won the United League

Luton Town have won some major honours in English football. The club reached its first major final in

Full Members Cup and Football League Cup (in 1987–88 and 1988–89 respectively).[1]

Luton Town have won all three of the present

Conference Premier champions in the 2013–14
season.

Football pyramid

Conference Premier championship trophy at the end of the 2013–14
season

Luton Town were the first club to be relegated from the top division to the fourth (relegated from First Division in 1959–60, started playing in Fourth Division in 1965–66) and then subsequently win promotion back to the top flight (promoted from Fourth Division in 1968–69 and started playing in First Division in 1974–75).

Domestic cup competitions

Football League Trophy in 2009

Uniquely, the club won the Football League Trophy and were relegated from the Football League in the same season.

Minor honours

Player records

Award winners

Appearances

Most appearances

Competitive first-team appearances only; substitutes appear in parentheses.[7][8][9][10]
 ¤ Played their full career at Luton Town
# Name Nation Years League FA Cup
League Cup
Other[C] Total
1
Bob Morton
 England 1948–64 ¤ 495 (0) 48 (0) 7 (0) 12 (0) 562 (0)
2 Fred Hawkes  England 1899–1920 ¤ 509 (0) 40 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 549 (0)
3 Ricky Hill  England 1975–89 429 (7) 33 (0) 37 (1) 0 (0) 499 (8)
4 Brian Stein  England 1977–88
1991–92
411 (16) 31 (0) 34 (1) 3 (0) 479 (17)
5 Mal Donaghy  Northern Ireland 1978–88
1989–90
415 (0) 36 (0) 34 (0) 3 (0) 488 (0)
6 Gordon Turner  England 1949–64 406 (0) 25 (0) 7 (0) 12 (0) 450 (0)
7 Marvin Johnson  England 1987–2002 ¤ 352 (21) 20 (1) 27 (2) 16 (1) 415 (25)
8 Ron Baynham  England 1952–65 388 (0) 31 (0) 5 (0) 8 (0) 432 (0)
9 Syd Owen  England 1947–59 388 (0) 27 (0) 0 (0) 8 (0) 423 (0)
10
David Preece
 England 1984–95 328 (8) 27 (0) 23 (0) 8 (0) 386 (8)

Goals

Steve Howard was the club's top goalscorer for five seasons in a row—2001–02 to 2005–06.
  • Most goals in a season: Joe Payne; with 58 during the 1936–37 season (including 55 league goals).[11]
  • Most goals in a match: Joe Payne; with 10 in match versus Bristol Rovers on 13 April 1936, which remains to this day, a
    Football League record.[11]

Top goalscorers

Competitive first-team appearances only; appearances including substitutes appear in parentheses and italics.[7][12][13][14][15][16]
# Name Nation Years League FA Cup
League Cup
Other[C] Total
1 Gordon Turner  England 1949–64 243 (406) 18 (25) 4 (7) 11 (12) 276 (450)
2 Andy Rennie  Scotland 1925–34 147 (307) 15 (26) 0 (0) 0 (2) 162 (335)
3 Brian Stein  England 1977–88
1991–92
130 (427) 6 (31) 15 (35) 3 (3) 154 (496)
4 Ernie Simms  England 1913–15
1916–22
109 (160) 13 (18) 0 (0) 0 (0) 122 (178)
5 Herbert Moody  England 1901–05
1907–12
93 (232) 11 (15) 0 (0) 0 (0) 104 (247)
6 Steve Howard  Scotland 2001–06 96 (212) 5 (8) 2 (7) 0 (1) 103 (228)
7=[D]
David Moss
 England 1978–85 88 (221) 3 (8) 3 (16) 0 (0) 94 (245)
7=[D] Jimmy Yardley  England 1926–32 78 (173) 16 (15) 0 (0) 0 (0) 94 (188)
9 Mick Harford  England 1984–90
1991–92
69 (168) 10 (27) 10 (17) 3 (4) 92 (216)
10 Joe Payne  England 1934–38 83 (72) 4 (5) 0 (0) 0 (0) 87 (77)

Transfers

Record transfer fees paid

# Fee (GBP) Paid to Name Nation Date Notes
1 £1,800,000 Barnsley F.C. Carlton Morris  England 6 July 2022 [17]
2 £1,200,000 Rijeka Simon Sluga  Croatia 19 July 2019 [18]
3 £850,000 Odense Boldklub Lars Elstrup  Denmark 21 August 1989 [19]
4 £750,000 Burnley
Steve Davis
 England 13 July 1995 [20]
5 £580,000 West Ham United Ian Feuer  United States 16 December 1995 [21]

Record transfer fees received

Curtis Davies was transferred from Luton Town to West Bromwich Albion for £3,000,000 on 31 August 2005.
# Fee (GBP) Received from Name Nation Date Notes
1 £8,000,000 Leicester City James Justin  England 28 June 2019 [22]
2 £4,000,000 Bournemouth Jack Stacey  England 8 July 2019 [23]
3=[E] £3,000,000 West Bromwich Albion Curtis Davies  England 31 August 2005 [24]
3=[E] £3,000,000 Birmingham City Rowan Vine  England 11 January 2007 [F][25]
4 £2,750,000 West Bromwich Albion Leon Barnett  England 26 July 2007 [26]
5 £2,500,000 Arsenal John Hartson  Wales 13 January 1995 [27]

International

This section refers only to caps won while a Luton Town player.

Managerial records

Club records

Goals

35 in 42 matches, Third Division South, 1921–22.[1]
35 in 46 matches,
Conference Premier, 2013–14
.

Points

Clean sheets

Matches

Firsts

A faded black-and-white photograph of an early 20th-century football stand, crowded with people. An impressive canopy is built into the stand's roof.
Kenilworth Road on 4 September 1905, just before Luton's first game there, against Plymouth Argyle

Record wins

Exeter City 0–5 Luton Town, Fourth Division, 21 October 1967.
Colchester United 0–5 Luton Town, Second Division, 21 April 2003.
Ebbsfleet United 1–6 Luton Town, Conference Premier, 20 March 2010.
Kettering Town 0–5 Luton Town, Conference Premier, 1 January 2012.
Alfreton Town 0–5 Luton Town, Conference Premier, 7 December 2013.
Nuneaton Town
0–5 Luton Town, Conference Premier, 22 February 2014.
Swindon Town 0–5 Luton Town, League Two, 26 December 2017.[66]
  • Record Football League Cup win: Luton Town 7–2 Mansfield Town, 3 October 1989.[67]
  • Record European win: Luton Town 5–0
    Ancona, Anglo-Italian Cup group stage, 13 December 1995.[68]

Record defeats

  • Record defeat: Small Heath 9–0 Luton Town, Second Division, 12 November 1898.[19]
  • Record home defeat: Luton Town 0–7 93rd Highland Regiment, 4 October 1890, FA Cup.[69]
  • Record home League defeat:[65]
Luton Town 0–5 Manchester United, First Division, 12 February 1984.
Luton Town 0–5
Sunderland
, Championship, 6 May 2007.
Luton Town 1–6 Leicester Fosse, Second Division, 14 January 1899.
Luton Town 1–6 Charlton Athletic, Second Division, 10 February 1962.
Luton Town 2–7 Shrewsbury Town, Fourth Division, 10 March 1965.
  • Record
    League Cup
    defeat:
Everton 5–1 Luton Town, 24 September 1968.[70]
Reading 5–1 Luton Town, 26 August 2008.[71]
  • Record European defeat:
    Genoa 4–0 Luton Town, Anglo-Italian Cup group stage, 11 October 1995.[68]

Record consecutive results

Attendances

  • Highest home attendance: 30,069 against Blackpool in the FA Cup sixth round Replay on 4 March 1959.[19]
  • Highest home attendance in a league match: 27,911 against Wolverhampton Wanderers on 5 November 1955.[50]
  • Highest home attendance in the Football League Cup: 27,023 against Arsenal on 6 October 1970.[73]

European statistics

Record by season

Below is Luton Town's record in

Heysel Stadium Disaster.[74][75][76][77][78]

Season Competition Round Date Country Club Venue Result[I] Attendance Notes
1972–73 Anglo-Italian Cup Group A 7 March 1973  Italy
Bari
Home 4–0 unknown [55]
21 March 1973  Italy
Hellas Verona
Away 1–2 [55]
4 April 1973  Italy Fiorentina Home 1–0 [55]
2 May 1973  Italy
Lazio
Away 2–2 [55]
1988–89
UEFA Cup
Unable to compete due to ban on English clubs in UEFA competitions due to Heysel Stadium disaster [J][74]
1992–93 Anglo-Italian Cup Group 5 15 September 1992  England Watford Away 0–0 5,197 [79]
29 September 1992  England Bristol City Home 1–1 2,538 [79]
1993–94 Anglo-Italian Cup Group 6 31 August 1993  England Watford Away 1–2 2,854 [80]
7 September 1993  England Southend United Home 1–1 1,823 [80]
1995–96 Anglo-Italian Cup Group A 5 September 1995  Italy
Perugia
Home 1–4 2,352 [68]
11 October 1995  Italy
Genoa
Away 0–4 3,759 [68]
8 November 1995  Italy
Cesena
Away 1–2 0461 [68]
13 December 1995  Italy
Ancona
Home 5–0 2,091 [68]

Record by opposition nationality

Competition Played Won Drawn Lost Goals
for
Goals
against
Anglo-Italian Cup against English clubs 4 0 3 1 3 4
against Italian clubs 8 3 1 4 15 14
Total 12 3 4 5 18 18

Record by location

Record at Kenilworth Road

Opposition nationality Played Won Drawn Lost Goals
for
Goals
against
English 2 0 2 0 2 2
Overseas 4 3 0 1 11 4
Total 6 3 2 1 13 6

Record away from Kenilworth Road

Opposition nationality Played Won Drawn Lost Goals
for
Goals
against
English 2 0 1 1 1 2
Overseas 4 0 1 3 4 10
Total 6 0 2 4 5 12

Footnotes

A. 
Two
, respectively.
B. ^ Upon its formation for the 1992–93 season, the FA Premier League became the top tier of English football; the First, Second and Third Divisions then became the second, third and fourth tiers, respectively.
C. 
play-offs
.
D. ^ Seventh equal
E. ^ Third equal
F. ^ Birmingham City originally paid £2.5 million for Rowan Vine, but promotion to the Premier League at the end of the season resulted in an extra £500,000 being paid, raising the total fee to £3 million.[25]
G. ^ Joe Kinnear was the club's first manager from outside the United Kingdom to manage the club in a matchTerry Mancini, another Irishman, had a spell as the club's caretaker manager (3–11 January 1990) but did not manage the club in a match.[81]
H. ^ Luton Town earned 56 points, but 30 were deducted at the start of the season, giving them a total of 26.[82] The lowest total, not including point deductions, is 37, in 1990–91.[1]
I. ^ Luton Town result always given first
J. 
Heysel Stadium Disaster.[74][83][84][85]

References

General

Specific

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  5. .
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