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Kenilworth Road, known affectionately as The Kenny, [2] is an association football stadium in Bury Park, Luton, Bedfordshire, England. It has been the home ground of Luton Town since 1905. The stadium has also hosted women's and youth international matches, including the second leg of the 1984 European Competition for Women's Football final.
The Luton Town chairman, David Evans, reacted by imposing a ban on all away supporters from Kenilworth Road from the start of the 1986–87 season. A club membership scheme was also introduced: Luton Town supporters' personal details were taken by the club and all fans would be required to carry their membership cards to be admitted to matches.
Nicknamed "The Hatters", Luton Town have played their home games at Kenilworth Road since 1905. Luton Town was the first club in southern England to turn professional. It joined the Football League before the 1897–98 season, left in 1900 because of financial problems, and rejoined in 1920.
Luton Town boss Rob Edwards has been speaking to the media before his side host Everton in the Premier League on Friday (20:00 BST kick-off). There are no new injury concerns but also no sidelined ...
The opening of Kenilworth Road on 4 September 1905. Luton Town Football Club is an English professional football club based in the town of Luton, Bedfordshire.Founded in 1885, Luton Town were the first professional team in the south of England, fully professional by 1891.
Kenilworth Road, the home of Luton Town (Getty Images) Follow live coverage as Luton Town face Millwall in the Championship today. An increasingly competitive second tier in English football ...
Power Court Stadium [1] is a football stadium under construction in Luton, Bedfordshire, that will become the home ground for Luton Town ahead of the 2027–28 season, [2] replacing Kenilworth Road. Power Court is the site of the former Luton power station, which was closed in 1969. [3]
In October 1997, Watford beat Luton 4–0 at Kenilworth Road, and again 25 years later, in October 2022 at Vicarage Road. Luton Town and Watford played each other regularly in the Southern League and, following the formation of Third Division South in season 1920–21, played every season until 1936–37, when Luton won promotion to Division Two.