"I thought we were well worth a point today. We played some great football and had some great chances that we did not stick away. It looked as though the goal we deserved would not come but eventually it came and Todorov took his goal well.
"Svetoslav Todorov has had one or two chances today which he has not taken and the crowd got a bit frustrated with him. He is a new player and a good player, with his talent he will score goals for us. It was a difficult angle for him for the goal but he slotted it in well. But we had lots of good chances before that - Robert hit the post of course with a great free kick – and you start to think that maybe it's not your day.
"We played well at Preston on Saturday, dominated them, particularly in the first half when we passed them to death. That's two sides in the top six that we have played against and done really well. Burnley were fourth in the league but they were not any better than us today. Come next season with four or five new faces – I know who I want - around the place I think you will see a Pompey side who can do something.
"I could not have come into a tougher set of games and it was not an ideal time to come in. But I have been delighted with the attitude of the players and the way they have worked in both games."
On the Clarets chances of promotion Redknapp added,
"I don't think Burnley will go up. I think it will be Birmingham against Wolves or West Brom in the play-off final at Cardiff."
Stan wasn't happy with Nik Michopoulos with the goal, and not surprisingly. He also suggested that Tony Grant was tired after two games over the weekend but Grant did only play around 20 minutes in the Wolves game.
"Niko should have done better with that and I told him so but that is a good point for us, there are another nine for us to play for and it is in our own hands. We are another point closer towards our target and Portsmouth is not an easy place to come to.
"Tony Grant tired and a few players looked a bit leggy. We have played two matches in 48 hours and it is a long way to come from where we are. The number of games we have had takes its toll but we have Gillingham on Saturday and we just have to try and win it. We expect nerves now but I am long enough in the tooth to cope.
"We had the best of the first half, they were better in the second half and perhaps we should have taken the bull by the horns. But we had enough chances really."
Todorov's telling touch gets Redknapp off the mark
Pat Symes at Fratton Park (Guardian)
Harry Redknapp praised Svetoslav Todorov after his striker's equaliser salvaged a 1-1 draw in the former West Ham manager's first match at Fratton Park in charge of Portsmouth.
"I am pleased Svetoslav has got off the mark because he had been taking some stick for not scoring in the previous two matches. Svetoslav is a Premiership player and the First Division will be no problem to him once he settles in."
Redknapp is also hoping the Pompey managership will be no problem once he has settled in but warned the fans to have patience, stressing that "this is a decent start".
Todorov, a Bulgarian international bought by Redknapp but later frozen out at West Ham, became a Portsmouth purchase for £750,000 on Redknapp's commendation before Graham Rix was sacked. His goal here went some way towards making up for an otherwise fitful contribution and for being sent off on Saturday.
For Burnley, though, the strain is starting to tell. Two defeats were followed by this draw here and there can be no complaints about the outcome, which leaves them struggling to stay among the play-off contenders.
Burnley's neat, methodical build-up was rewarded with a half-time lead through David Johnson's fourth goal in five matches since arriving on loan from Nottingham Forest. Johnson cut inside the challenge of Scott Wilson, another Redknapp signing, and his rising drive beat the diving Dave Beasant.
Paul Gascoigne came on after 68 minutes to cheers from both sets of supporters but he could do nothing to regain the initiative from Robert Prosinecki, who was at the heart of Portsmouth's best moments.
Todorov's goal owed as much to his perseverance as hesitancy from Nik Michopoulos over an innocuous ball forward from Nigel Quashie.
Ten months ago Redknapp left West Ham saying he was finished with management. Yet here he was on the touchline screaming orders some 30 minutes from the end. "I have missed it," he said with a smile.