The morning after the first leg, the football internet did what it always did: process a result loudly and at length.
Most of the coverage agreed on the basics.
A tight game between two evenly matched sides, a disallowed goal that would be talked about for days, and a second leg that was genuinely open.
From there, the takes that came through varied.
Both fans argued that their team had been the better side and deserved more.
Others said Luton had done exactly what a third-placed team should do away from home at a tough ground.
A few, namely the Wigan fans, made the point that Leo had been managed carefully and that the second leg, with Kenilworth Road packed and hostile, was where the real test would come.
Nobody was sure how it ended as both sides wished their team would come out on top, but they knew they'd have to wait till the kickoff and then the final whistle.
The days that followed wasn't anything the Wigan players hadn't seen before.
