List of Luton Town F.C. managers

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Luton Town Football Club is an English association football club, based in the town of Luton, Bedfordshire. The club was founded in 1885,[1] and will compete in League One during the 2025–26 season.

Rob Edwards
Luton Town were promoted to the Premier League under Rob Edwards in the 2022–23 season.

The playing staff were originally organised by a trainer, and chosen for matches by a committee made up of directors led by the club's secretary.[2] The club appointed an official manager for the first time in 1925. George Thompson took up the role in February, but left after eight months, "scalded by his experience".[3] Thompson was not replaced until 1927, when former player John McCartney took charge.[4] Harold Wightman worked during the early 1930s to build a team to challenge for promotion, but was sacked early on in the 1935–36 season. Without a manager, the team finished as runners-up in the Third Division South, before topping the table in 1936–37 under Ned Liddle. Dally Duncan was appointed in 1947, and during his 11-year tenure he took Luton into the First Division for the first time.[5] After Duncan was sacked early in the 1958–59 season, the club's board of directors managed the team to the 1959 FA Cup final.[6]

Poor spells under four managers resulted in relegation to the Fourth Division by 1965.[7] Allan Brown became manager in November 1966, and Luton won the division in 1967–68.[8] Brown moved on halfway through the next season, and Alec Stock continued the revival, winning promotion to the Second Division in 1969–70.[9] Luton won another promotion in 1973–74 to return to the top division under Harry Haslam, but Haslam was unable to prevent relegation during the following season.[10] David Pleat became manager in 1978,[11] and built a team that took the 1981–82 Second Division championship. Though Pleat moved on in 1986, success continued—Luton finished seventh during 1986–87, and won the Football League Cup a year later under Ray Harford. Managed by Jimmy Ryan, the team avoided relegation in 1989–90, and repeated that feat during the following season. When Ryan was then sacked in favour of a return for Pleat,[11] Luton were relegated in 1991–92. Pleat left again in 1995, and a five-year spell under Lennie Lawrence then saw Luton drop to the third tier.[12] A disastrous 2000–01 season—in which three managers took the helm at the club—saw Luton fall into the bottom division of the Football League for the first time since 1968.[13][14][15][16][17]

Luton regained their Football League status following promotion to League Two under John Still in the 2013–14 season.

Joe Kinnear took Luton back up at the first time of asking, but was sacked by the club's new owners following a takeover in May 2003.[18][19] Mike Newell was appointed as manager,[20] and his side became League One champions in 2004–05. Internal troubles at the club started to intensify during the summer of 2006, as the club's chairman was revealed by Newell to be making illegal payments to agents[21]—after writing a scathing letter to the board,[21] Newell was sacked in March 2007.[21][22] Kevin Blackwell was appointed in his stead,[23] but was also sacked less than a year later on 16 January 2008;[24] former player Mick Harford was made Luton Town's new manager the same day,[25] and he was unable to prevent the club's relegation in 2007–08. After being deducted a total of 30 points by the Football League and The Football Association for 2008–09,[26] Luton were relegated to the Conference Premier;[27] however, the club claimed a Football League Trophy victory during the same season in a 3–2 win over Scunthorpe United in the final.[28] After two months of the 2009–10 season, Harford left the club by mutual consent,[29] to be replaced a month later by Richard Money.[30] Money's assistant, Gary Brabin, replaced him in March 2011,[31] and managed the club until he was sacked a year later.[32] His replacement, Paul Buckle, took charge in April 2012,[33] and was himself replaced in February 2013 by John Still.[34] Still took Luton back into the Football League in his first full season as manager, breaking a number of club records in the process.[35]

Nathan Jones
Nathan Jones oversaw Luton's promotion to League One in the 2017–18 season.

Still guided Luton to a comfortable finish in their first season back in League Two, but was sacked by the club in December 2015 following a poor run of form.[36] He was replaced by Nathan Jones in January 2016, who took on his first ever managerial role.[37] Jones led the club to promotion to League One in the 2017–18 season, before departing in January 2019 to join Championship club Stoke City.[38][39] He left Luton with the highest Football League points per game ratio of any manager in their history.[40] Mick Harford returned as caretaker manager for the remainder of the 2018–19 season, leading Luton to promotion to the Championship.[41] Graeme Jones was appointed as permanent manager in May 2019, though left the club by mutual consent before the end of the 2019–20 season with the club 23rd in the table.[42][43] Nathan Jones was reappointed in May 2020 and guided Luton to Championship safety on the final day of the season,[44][45] and led them to 12th place the following season with their highest points total in the second tier since 1981–82.[46] After he led Luton to the play-offs in 2021–22, in which they were beaten 2–1 on aggregate by Huddersfield Town in the semi-final,[47] Jones left in November 2022 with the club ninth in the table to take over at Premier League club Southampton.[48] He was succeeded by Rob Edwards,[49] who led Luton to promotion to the Premier League via the play-offs, with a penalty shoot-out victory over Coventry City in the final, marking the club's return to the first tier after a 31-year absence.[50] Luton spent one season in the Premier League before being relegated back to the Championship.[51] Edwards was sacked in January 2025, with Matt Bloomfield joining the club days later.[52] Luton suffered a second successive relegation at the end of the season,[53] and, after a poor start to League One in the 2025–26 season, Bloomfield was sacked on 6 October 2025.[54] Jack Wilshire joined Luton shortly after on 13 October and in the same season would lead the club to win the Football League Trophy for the second time in the club's history, beating Stockport County 3–1 in the final.[55]

Managers

All first-team matches in national or international competition are counted, except the abandoned 1939–40 Football League season and matches in wartime leagues and cups.Names of caretaker managers are supplied where known, and periods of caretaker-management are highlighted in italics. Win percentage is rounded to one decimal place.[56][57]
Statistics are complete up to and including the match played on 25 April 2026.

Key

M: Matches played W: Matches won D: Matches drawn L: Matches lost

More information Name, Nation ...
Name Nation From To M W D L Win % Honours and achievements Notes
George Thompson England 16 February 1925 26 October 1925 25979036.0
[3][58][59]
none
26 October 1925 14 September 1927 77302225039.0
[B][60]
John McCartney Scotland 14 September 1927 21 December 1929 151573856037.7
[A][4][61][62]
George Kay England 23 December 1929 13 May 1931 71291626040.8
[A][63][64]
Harold Wightman England 1 June 1931 9 October 1935 198854964042.9
[A][65][66]
none
9 October 1935 13 August 1936 4123126056.1 Football League Third Division South runners-up, 1935–36 [B][67][68]
Ned Liddle England 13 August 1936 26 February 1938 79421126053.2 Football League Third Division South champions, 1936–37 [69][70]
none
26 February 1938 1 June 1938 12354025.0
[B][71]
Neil McBain Scotland 1 June 1938 5 June 1939 4322615051.2
[72][73]
George Martin Scotland 4 December 1944 24 May 1947 3618810050.0
[C][74][75]
none
24 May 1947 13 June 1947 1100100.0
[B][75]
Dally Duncan Scotland 13 June 1947 16 October 1958 503192133178038.2 Football League Second Division runners-up, 1954–55 [5][76][77]
none
16 October 1958 27 April 1959 39131016033.3
[B][6][78]
Syd Owen England 27 April 1959 16 April 1960 42101121023.8 FA Cup runners-up, 1958–59 [7][79][80]
none
16 April 1960 18 July 1960 3111033.3
[B][80]
Sam Bartram England 18 July 1960 14 June 1962 95351842036.8
[81][82]
Jack Crompton England 29 June 1962 6 July 1962 0000!
[83]
Bill Harvey England 24 July 1962 21 November 1964 121372658030.6
[84][85]
Charlie Watkins Scotland 21 November 1964 16 February 1965 11317027.3
[56][86]
George Martin Scotland 16 February 1965 3 November 1966 82341632041.5
[74][87]
Allan Brown Scotland 4 November 1966 17 December 1968 111562431050.5 Football League Fourth Division champions, 1967–68 [8][88][89]
Alec Stock England 20 December 1968 27 April 1972 172715645041.3 Football League Third Division runners-up, 1969–70 [9][90][91]
none
27 April 1972 4 May 1972 1010000.0
[B][92]
Harry Haslam England 4 May 1972 23 January 1978 2751106996040.0 Football League Second Division runners-up, 1973–74 [10][93]
David Pleat England 24 January 1978 16 May 1986 393158108127040.2 Football League Second Division champions, 1981–82 [11][94]
John Moore Scotland 3 June 1986 16 June 1987 47191513040.4 Club's best league finish: seventh in the top flight, 1986–87 [95][96]
Ray Harford England 16 June 1987 3 January 1990 133513448038.3
[97][98]
Terry Mancini Ireland 3 January 1990 11 January 1990 0000!
[99][100]
Jim Ryan Scotland 11 January 1990 13 May 1991 63181629028.6
[101][102]
David Pleat England 7 June 1991 11 June 1995 207557082026.6
[11][103]
Terry Westley England 3 July 1995 18 December 1995 285716017.9
[104][105]
Lennie Lawrence England 21 December 1995 4 July 2000 250906694036.0
[12][106]
Ricky Hill England 10 July 2000 11 November 2000 212811009.5
[13]
Lil Fuccillo England 16 November 2000 8 February 2001 15429026.7
[107]
Joe Kinnear Ireland 8 February 2001 23 May 2003 122562838045.9 Football League Third Division runners-up, 2001–02 [15]
Mike Newell England 23 June 2003 15 March 2007 200834968041.5 Football League One champions, 2004–05 [108]
Brian Stein England 15 March 2007 27 March 2007 1001000.0
[22][23][109]
Kevin Blackwell England 27 March 2007 16 January 2008 4216917038.1
[110]
Mick Harford England 16 January 2008 1 October 2009 91252937027.5 Football League Trophy winners, 2008–09 [29][111]
Alan Neilson Wales 1 October 2009 30 October 2009 5410080.0
[29][30]
Richard Money England 30 October 2009 28 March 2011 83452117054.2 Conference Premier runners-up, 2009–10 [30][31]
Gary Brabin England 28 March 2011 31 March 2012 62292211046.8 Conference Premier play-off finalists, 2010–11 [31][32]
Alan Neilson Wales 31 March 2012 8 April 2012 1001000.0
[32][33]
Paul Buckle England 8 April 2012 19 February 2013 4826913054.2 Conference Premier play-off finalists, 2011–12 [33][34]
Alan Neilson Wales 19 February 2013 26 February 2013 3012000.0
[112][113][114]
John Still England 26 February 2013 17 December 2015 148693841046.6 Conference Premier champions, 2013–14 [36][115]
Andy Awford England 17 December 2015 6 January 2016 4112025.0
[36][116]
Nathan Jones Wales 6 January 2016 9 January 2019 170874637051.2 EFL League Two runners-up, 2017–18 [117]
Mick Harford England 10 January 2019 7 May 2019 211263057.1 EFL League One champions, 2018–19 [111]
Graeme Jones England 7 May 2019 24 April 2020 4112524029.3
[118][119]
Mick Harford England 24 April 2020 28 May 2020 0000!
[119][120][121]
Nathan Jones Wales 28 May 2020 10 November 2022 133543742040.6
[117]
Rob Edwards Wales 17 November 2022 9 January 2025 103322546031.1 EFL Championship play-off winners, 2022–23 [122]
Matt Bloomfield England 14 January 2025 6 October 2025 3312714036.4
[123]
Jack Wilshere England 13 October 2025 Present 42211110050.0 Football League Trophy winners, 2025–26 [124]
Close

Footnotes

A. a b c Secretary-manager
B. a b c d e f g The club was managed by a committee during these times, made up of the club's trainer and directors.
C. ^ George Martin was appointed as coach on 1 August 1939, and promoted to manager on 4 December 1944.[56]

References

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