Luton Town parted ways with manager Graeme Jones yesterday.

The 50-year-old had been in charge for less than a year, but yesterday the club announced they had mutually agreed to have Jones' contract terminated amid financial worries.

He'd been assistant to Roberto Martinez at all of Swansea City, Wigan Athletic, Everton and Belgium, before landing his first managerial role at Kenilworth Road last May.

It's been a slog for Luton this season though - they currently sit in 23rd-place of the Championship table, six points off safety. There's been some moments to cherish for Hatters fans though, and here we take a look at four of Jones' best moments at the helm:

The EFL season kicked-off with a Friday night fixture between Luton and Middlesbrough.

Many had tipped Luton as dark horses in the Championship this season, after storming to the League One title last year, and they thoroughly impressed in their opening game of this season.

James Collins was on hand to snatch a late point at Kenilworth Road, and to conclude a thrilling 3-3 draw under the lights.

Luton claimed back-to-back victories with a 2-1 win over Huddersfield Town in August - their first home win of the season. Collins was again on the score-sheet, and Andrew Shinnie sealed a nine-minute comeback after Karlan Grant's second-half opener for the Terriers.

Jones' side sat 15th after that win, and looking as though they were gaining momentum in the Championship.

Possibly Luton's most complete performance of the season was their 3-0 win at home to Bristol City. Second-half goals from Pelly Ruddock, Harry Cornick and an injury time own goal from Ashley Williams saw Luton claim their second home win of the season.

That second-half was probably the best that Luton have played under Jones - they played the counter-attack brilliantly against a top-six side in Bristol City, and climbed to 16th with the win.

Luton's worst performance of the season, by a long way, was their 7-0 drubbing at Griffin Park. Brentford had embarrassed Luton that day and when the reverse fixture came around in February, a similar scoreline was predicted.

Brentford were steamrolling their way to the top-three after New Year but Luton stopped them in their tracks with a well-earned 2-1 win at Kenilworth Road.

An own goal from Shandon Baptiste, before Martin Cranie's goal on the cusp of half-time gave Luton and unprecedented 2-0 lead at half-time. Ollie Watkins scored a late consolation, but Jones' side held on for a fine win.