Molby's message to Harriers
Kidderminster has been sent a 'good luck' message from Jan Molby ahead of Harriers' final bid to make the play-off's.
The former Liverpool and Denmark midfielder remains the only man to take the club into the Football League, managing the club to the title in 2000.
Now Mark Yates' side bid to do the same nine years on, although they will need outside help to do it.
The team sit sixth ahead of the last game of the season against Kettering on Sunday, with only Torquay in fifth and Stevenage in fourth that can be realistically caught.
Boro play at mid-table Mansfield, but the Gulls have the short straw – a last day clash with league leaders Burton.
Now Molby, speaking from a public appearance at the Cross Sports Bar in Oldswinford, has forwarded his best wishes.
He said: "I wish them good luck, of course I do. It was great for the town the last time they went into the Football League, and this is the closest they have been since.
"All Kidderminster can do is win their game and keep their fingers crossed. They can do it, even if it has been taken out of their hands.
"There could be a few twists and turns yet."
Molby spent three years at Aggborough as manager from 1999 to 2002, before leaving the club to join Hull, then plying their trade with Harriers in what is now League Two.
He returned for a second spell in October 2003 but left a year later – the season the club dropped out of the Football League.
But even part two of the story was not without his moments, reaching the FA Cup third round in 2004 before bowing out to Wolves after a replay.
The former boss recalls: "I look upon my time as a happy one, I was proud of what we achieved as a team.
"I think we were the last part-time club to win the Conference and we had some good times in the Football League.
"My second spell in charge was not as good but we still enjoyed some good times even that season, and the cup run put some much needed money into the club's coffers.
"Things are a lot different there now, there is a whole new set-up there and Mark is the boss now.
"He played under me when I was there, he was a born leader. Now he is going on to be a good manager."