Luton name Wycombe boss Bloomfield as new manager

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Matt Bloomfield gives two thumbs upImage source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Matt Bloomfield first joined Wycombe as a player in 2003

Luton Town have appointed Wycombe Wanderers head coach Matt Bloomfield as their new manager on a three-and-a-half-year contract.

The 40-year-old leaves the promotion-chasing League One side to replace Rob Edwards at Kenilworth Road just a week after the former Welsh international, who famously guided The Hatters to Premier League promotion in 2023, left the club by mutual consent as they struggle near the bottom of the Championship.

Luton are 20th in the second tier, just two places and two points clear of the bottom three, as they look to avoid back-to-back relegations after losing their Premier League status after just one season in the top flight last May.

Bloomfield said it was a "genuine honour and a privilege" to take the helm at The Hatters. "I'm incredibly proud and very, very happy to be here," he told the club's website, external.

Wycombe, who are second in League One, said they they remain focused on a "long-term vision" for the club and "building on this season's foundations of success".

"The club is naturally disappointed with Matt's decision to leave in the middle of the season," said a statement on Wycombe's website, external.

"However, we respect his decision to pursue this new chapter in his career. He leaves with the gratitude and best wishes of everyone at Wycombe Wanderers."

Bloomfield's assistant coach Richard Thomas, first-team coach Lee Harrison and senior analyst Ben Cirne will join him in making the switch to Luton.

His first game in charge will be at home to Preston North End on Saturday.

Luton are the third club in three different divisions of the English Football League that Bloomfield has taken charge of in less than three years.

The former midfielder retired as a long-serving player at Wycombe in 2022 and moved into coaching with The Chairboys before being appointed as Colchester boss later that same year.

Within months he was back in League One as Gareth Ainsworth's successor at Wycombe, a club he first signed for in 2003 as a player after being released by Ipswich Town as a teenager.

Luton chief executive Gary Sweet said Luton had "gone above and beyond to compensate Wycombe" to secure Bloomfield and his support staff from Wycombe.

He thanked the third-tier club for their "co-operation in ensuring a swift and smooth transition".

"Since returning to Wycombe as manager we have been hugely impressed with his work in leading them back towards the top of League One, and especially in how they have done it in such an entertaining way, forging a reputation for front-footed attacking football," Sweet added.

"We identified Matt's personal and team-building qualities as the outstanding candidate to fit in with the culture we have long established here at Luton Town."

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