That’s according to Hatters CEO Gary Sweet, who insists supporters were always at the heart of their controversial decision
to reschedule the fixture.
Vincent Kompany’s side were due to take on the Hatters on Saturday, August 19, a week on from their season opener against
Manchester City.
But owing to the £13m worth of ground works at Kenilworth Road, the Hatters could offer no guarantees to
the Premier League
that the redevelopment would not impact the scheduling of the match at late notice.
Addressing the decision in an interview with talkSPORT, Luton’s CEO Gary Sweet admits it was a tough call but ultimately
the right one.
“The postponement really is effectively about supporters,” Sweet said.
“We have to either give a cast-iron guarantee that Kenilworth Road will be ready for that game and if at a later stage we
found that there were subsequent problems, we technically could be under some kind of sanction from the Premier League.
We want to avoid that of course, so we just took the sensible decision.”
Sweet added: “If this was the EFL, and no disrespect to the EFL, we’d have cracked on and played it.
“First of all, we wouldn’t have been doing this work. But being in the Premier League just means the eyes of the world are
upon you a little bit more.
“We’ve got to be conscious of what decisions we make and be a little bit more responsible for those. I think it was a
responsible decision in the end and one that I thank Burnley for and I thank everybody involved for.
“You look at this type of project, you’d normally need half a year to deliver it, let alone a quarter of a year. Bear in mind we
actually had the opportunity to get promoted last season, so we started the thought process 18 months ago.
“We are trying to deliver the impossible, far more than any other club has ever done. It is a gargantuan task that we’re trying
to achieve, but we will deliver it and that’s why I apologise to supporters for the postponement.
“I know we’ll get some criticism for it, but we’ll take that on the chin. At the end of the day it’s the right call.”
Sweet did admit there was a chance of switching the fixture to be played at Turf Moor, with the return leg taking place at
Kenilworth Road on January 13.
Explaining why that didn’t happen, he added: “It was an option, but if the shoe was on the other foot I probably wouldn’t
want to come to Kenilworth Road in the middle of January.
“But, being sensible, we just wanted to keep the calendar as it was.
“We’ve got an opportunity where the international break isn’t too far away (weekend of September 9/10), so it will be played
just after that we think.”
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