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    Good on Barry Glendenning

    Posted by Gut City Hatter on 1/2/2024, 1:54:39

    As non-Guardian readers probably won't have seen it, I would just like to draw attention to the comments on Luton written by that excellent judge of football, renowned drinker and very funny Irishman, Barry Glendenning, in his contribution to the Guardian's Football Daily blog:
    https://email.t-online.de/em#f=INBOX&m=113276987224690210&method=showReadmail

    Barry was one of the few so-called football writers in the main press outlets (possibly the ONLY one) who didn't predict the Town to finish hopelessly low down the Premier League as certain relegation fodder: he admittedly didn't go overboard, as he expected us to finish 17th, but he has at least recognised and understood what the club is about, and even seems to have quite a man-crush on the saintly Rob Edwards.

    (Barry also appears regularly on the Guardian's witty and insightful Football Weekly podcast, hosted by Max Rushden, with regular contributions from Town-supporting Faye Carruthers, Andros's dad, Troy, and many other excellent and well-informed football pundits.)

      Re: Good on Barry Glendenning

      Posted by Philps Smith on 1/2/2024, 7:42:14, in reply to "Good on Barry Glendenning"

      Excellent podcast even with Rushden at the helm

        Re: Good on Barry Glendenning

        Posted by Camavinga on 1/2/2024, 6:44:33, in reply to "Good on Barry Glendenning"

        I met Barry in a bar in Brixton, piss head but a top man and is indeed funny.

          Re: Good on Barry Glendenning

          Posted by Vladimir Luton on 1/2/2024, 9:21:08, in reply to "Re: Good on Barry Glendenning"

          Is that the bar that is cash only still?

            Re: Good on Barry Glendenning

            Posted by Camavinga on 1/2/2024, 16:07:44, in reply to "Re: Good on Barry Glendenning"

            No idea. Not often, I’m in South London. I was starstruck when I saw him, but didn’t wanna bother him with too much football chat

          Re: Good on Barry Glendenning

          Posted by Realistic on 1/2/2024, 3:58:14, in reply to "Good on Barry Glendenning"

          Can you post a working link?

            Re: Good on Barry Glendenning

            Posted by Barry on 1/2/2024, 7:03:21, in reply to "Re: Good on Barry Glendenning"

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            GLAD HATTERS
            When Luton Town won the playoff final at Wembley last season to win promotion to the Premier League, they were immediately installed as white-hot favourites to go straight back down. The plucky Hatters hadn’t played in the top flight since 1992, when they were relegated just a few months before Sky Sports invented football in England and records officially began, but on that fateful day at Wembley they became the first team in history to return to the top tier of English football after suffering multiple relegations into what these days is known as the National League. Indeed, on Football Daily’s only ever trip to Kenilworth Road a little more than 13 years ago, we saw them play Forest Green on a freezing night in a match partly soundtracked by the chattering of our own teeth and the defiant chants of 14 (yes, we counted them) travelling fans.

            Having witnessed Luton at their lowest ebb in the non-league wilderness, it was heartwarming to see them at one of their highest, delivering their standout performance of the season as they spanked four goals without reply past a Brighton side with no answers for the ferocious intensity of hosts seemingly inspired by the pre-match appearance of tearful skipper Tom Lockyer, making his first visit to the ground since a cardiac arrest during a game at Bournemouth six weeks ago. “It’s been a really great night and I think we’ve been building this momentum for a really long time,” purred Luton’s preposterously handsome manager, Rob Edwards. “We know we’re still going to have difficult moments and difficult periods but we’re giving ourselves a chance.”

            Being outside the relegation zone and in with a half-decent chance of staying up is more than many Luton fans would have settled for before the season started, when much of the outside noise focused on the fact that travelling fans have to enter the Kenilworth Road away end by climbing through the bathroom window of an adjacent house, and assorted experts were predicting they’d struggle to get near Derby County’s record low top-flight points tally of 11 in 2007-08. With 19 to their name already and the same number of games left to play, this steadily improving rag-bag assortment of might-bes and coulda-beens look on course to hit the magic 40-point mark, not least when one considers some of their finest performances this season have come in games against elite sides, from which they’ve taken nothing. While Brighton don’t quite fit into that bracket, their manager Roberto De Zerbi has, in recent days, been named as a potential successor to Jürgen Klopp at Liverpool or Xavi at Barcelona. On the evidence of his team’s display here, he’ll struggle to make the Luton shortlist when Edwards takes over at Anfield or the Camp Nou.

            And finally, a word for Elijah Adebayo, who last night became the first Luton Town player to score a hat-trick in the Premier League – and the first one since their Danish cult hero Lars Elstrup filled his boots against Norwich City in 1990 to do so in a top-flight game. In what could be a portent of things to come, Luton ended that particular season one spot above the relegation zone, while further up the table Arsenal finished top of the league.

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            Yeovil’s Matthew Worthington (left) and Sonny Blu Lo-Everton get the badge in during their 3-1 win over Slough on Tuesday night.
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              Re: Good on Barry Glendenning

              Posted by Jb on 1/2/2024, 7:15:09, in reply to "Re: Good on Barry Glendenning"

              partly soundtracked by the chattering of our own teeth

              Brilliant

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