Bloomfield will use booing as ‘fuel’ to succeed as Town boss insists he can win Luton fans back

Bloomfield will use booing as ‘fuel’ to succeed as Town boss insists he can win Luton fans back.

Luton manager Matt Bloomfield maintains he would use the harsh reaction he received from Town’s travelling fans during and after Saturday’s 3-1 defeat at Lincoln City as ‘fuel’ to succeed at Kenilworth Road, while still remaining convinced he can re-engage the Hatters’ supporters.

The visitors’ well-below-par, and frankly humiliating, performance at the LNER Stadium saw the hosts grab a merited 12th-minute lead when they were carved open by the brilliant Freddie Draper ball, allowing Ben House to go clean through and easily past Josh Keeley.

With Town struggling to string together any moves of their own in the first half hour, with passes either being over-hit or, on several occasions, going straight out of play, there were audible signs of disappointment from the away end before the half hour mark, with many of the nearly 1,500 in attendance making their way to the concourses with nearly 10 minutes of the 45 remaining.

Town began to show some belated signs of life in the closing stages of the first period, Nahki Wells volleying wide and Jordan Clark’s drive was tipped over by Imps keeper George Wickens, while once Shayden Morris came on after the break, it looked like they might escape with an unlikely point when Clark cleverly turned in Mill Alli’s pass from a short free kick.

 

However, with five minutes remaining, the Hatters’ defence crumbled once more, with substitute Justin Obikwu capitalising on an error by Christ Makosso to beat Keeley again, and House scoring his second even later, bending into the bottom corner after more poor defending.

Before the final whistle, the away supporters sang ‘you’re not fit to wear the shirt’ and ‘you’re getting sacked in the morning,’ with Town fans continuing to express their feelings when Bloomfield stepped over to show his appreciation.

 

Football supporters want their teams to, and I’m not going to tell you what they want; I’m sure they can figure it out for themselves, but in general, football supporters want their team to show passion and drive while still taking up points. We didn’t show it today, so they have every right to question what’s going on.
“You have to front it up; that is my role as a manager. That is why I wanted to perform this job, the responsibilities it entails. I appreciate the responsibility that comes with it, and when things don’t go as planned, you have to face the consequences.
I completely understand our supporters’ dissatisfaction, as well as their desire to see things improve on the pitch, but I can guarantee you and everyone else that no one cares more than me. I’ll be working night and day to attempt to present things in a brighter light and achieve better results, and I’ll keep doing so.”
On whether he can use the poor performance and fan reaction as motivation to turn things around, with Luton suffering their third defeat in four league games and dropping to 11th place, Bloomfield said: “Listen, I don’t think I could be any more determined, but it’s fuel, it’s absolutely fuel.
I have a strong drive, a burning desire, to get everything right, to put more points on the board, and to have our squad play the way we all know they can. “We’re going through a difficult time right now, but the only way to get through it is to remain together, work hard, and emerge stronger.
I’m quite proud of my work, as well as our group’s work, and it aches. I’m human, and football managers are human; resilience comes with the territory of doing this job. You must develop resilience, dig deep, and persevere while believing in your task.
I am confident in our efforts and aim to strengthen them further. I believe this is the first performance of the season; Bradford away wasn’t good enough, today wasn’t good enough, and this is the first time I’ve had to stand here and be honest.
We’ve lost our last two home games, yet we’ve had 43 shots, 37 of which were in our opponent’s box. We need to cherish those moments more, but today there’s no excuse; it wasn’t good enough, and we need to improve.”
Although Bloomfield stated he would wait until Town returned to training before discussing matters with his players, he could not hide his dissatisfaction with the manner in which they were breached for the second time in the game.
With Luton finally enjoying some sort of momentum, they switched off after a clearing by keeper Wickens, which the manager had hammered into his players earlier, and Tom Draper easily beat Alli,He looked to leave the ball in the air, and with Christ Makosso heading against Obikwu rather than away, the replacement was able to finish the job clinically. He explained:
“It’s a basic ball up. We taught all week that the custodian delivers to the right side, that we must win initial contacts and be prepared for the seconds. Lincoln is incredibly structured; we knew what was coming and planned accordingly.
We gained back in the game with a long goal kick out to the right side, and Milli stopped when he heard a shout from behind him, thinking it was Cohen (Bramall), but we simply had to contend on the first one.

“I’d rather have two players competing than none; they flip it through, it ricochets off Christ, and he’s one on one.

The third goal is to cease; it is intolerable, and I will not defend it from us now. We were prepared for what was to come, so we were not surprised.

The custodian delivered to the right side after around two minutes, which we practiced for all week. We need to enhance our execution. I am honest with the boys, and I will always be honest.

They understand where I stand right now, and I will always speak up and tell the lads what I think, but Mondays are for discussion; today was not. I’m hurting right now, and we all have to be hurting when the results don’t go our way, but we have to use it to keep working and come back stronger.”

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