Middlesbrough F.C.
Steve Gibson | manager =
Gareth Southgate | league =
FA Premier League | season =
2005-06 |
position = Premier League, 14th |
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Middlesbrough Football Club are an
English football club, commonly known as The Boro, currently in the
FA Premier League. The team plays at the
Riverside Stadium in
Middlesbrough,
North-East England. The current manager is
Gareth Southgate who was appointed on
June 7,
2006. The chairman of the club is
Steve Gibson. The official
historian/statistician is
Harry Glasper. The official mascot is Roary the Lion, who is played by Andrew Morgan of Kirklevington.
Middlesbrough won the
League Cup in
2004, the club's first major trophy since its formation in
1876.The club's traditional local rivals are
Sunderland and
Newcastle United.
Formation and Foundation (The Early Years)
Members of Middlesbrough
Cricket Club founded Middlesbrough Football Club in 1876. Middlesbrough FC turned professional in 1889, returned to amateur status in 1892 and then became professional for good in 1899. In the 1913/14 season the club finished third in the English First Division which is still to this day the highest the club has finished in the top division of English football.
Mannion, Hardwick and a Missed Opportunity (Pre and Post World War II)
Many believe that the record of third place would have been beaten if it wasn't for the outbreak of
World War II, in the final season before the war Middlesbrough finished 4th in the first division with an excellent young team that included England Captain
George Hardwick and the legendary
Wilf Mannion. The following season Middlesbrough were heavily tipped to challenge for the Championship and along with
Everton were the favourites to win the title, sadly that great team never saw its best years as
World War II intervened and deprived the people of
Middlesbrough of seeing if their team was capable of being champions of England. Some seven years later after the war had ended, the team although still very good had lost a number of its players to retirement. The club still managed to finish sixth in the 1950/51 season but many people felt that the Middlesbrough teams best years had been lost to the war. In 1954 the club was relegated from the first division for the first time in 25 years. They wouldn't return to the top flight of English football until former
World Cup winner
Jack Charlton became the manager.
Return to the Top (1974 - 1982)
Middlesbrough's next significant impact on the English game came in 1974, when they won the Second Division championship and were promoted to the First Division under the management of
Jack Charlton. Boro finished sixth in the league a year later and just missed out on a place in the UEFA Cup, although Charlton was credited Manager of the Year for masterminding the club's impressive progress over the previous two seasons.
Near Oblivion (1982 - 1986)
Boro were relegated back to the Second Division in 1982, but the club's lowest ebb came in 1986 when they were relegated to the Third Division and found themselves in a financial crisis which looked likely to cause
bankruptcy. The bailiffs even locked the club out of
Ayresome Park and they had to play their first two home games of the 1986-87 season at
Hartlepool United's
Victoria Park. Lifelong fan and Teesside businessman,
Steve Gibson, then came along and saved the club with a takeover deal. Gibson was founder and chairman of Bulkhaul Limited, which was established in 1981 and is dedicated to the global transportation of bulk liquids, powders and gasses. He has often been seen as a fan funding his passion, rather than a businessman working for profit. This meant that the fans were quickly won over and he continues to be held in the highest regard by the fans of his club.
The Rioch Revival (1986 - 1990)
Manager
Bruce Rioch and his players pulled together after the takeover and finished second in the Third Division to win automatic promotion to the Second Division. A year later they won the Second Division promotion/First Division relegation playoffs and achieved a second successive promotion which landed them in the First Division.
Middlesbrough endured a difficult time in 1988-89 and spent whole season fighting a battle against relegation which was lost on the final day. Their dismal form continued into the following season and a second successive relegation looked on the cards. Rioch left for Millwall in March 1990 and his successor
Colin Todd just managed to save Boro from the drop.
Up... and down again (1990 - 1994)
1990-91 saw Boro's form improve substantially and a seventh place finish was enough to qualify for the playoffs - this time four promotion places were up for grabs because the First Division was re-expanding to 22 clubs for the 1991-92 season. But the promotion dream was ended in the semi-finals when Boro lost to eventual playoff winners Notts County. Todd left soon afterwards and was succeeded by Charlton's
Lennie Lawrence.
Lawrence's first season at the helm was a success, with Boro reaching the League Cup semi finals for the first time and most significantly finishing runners-up in the Second Division - booking their place in the inaugural Premier League.
Boro were mid table in the Premiership come Christmas 1992, but a run of seven defeats beginning in February dragged them down the table and they were relegated after losing their penultimate game of the season. The board kept faith in Lawrence but he resigned a year later after failing to achieve promotion back to the Premiership.
The Robson Revolution (1994 - 2001)
Lawrence's successor was 37-year-old player-manager
Bryan Robson, who had just ended an illustrious 13-year career with
Manchester United and was a former
England captain. His first season was a great success as Boro lifted the Division One title and were promoted back to the Premiership after a two-year exile. 1994-95 was the club's last season at Ayresome Park, from which they were relocating after 92 years to the impressive new
Riverside Stadium on the banks of the
River Tees.
Boro went on a massive spending spree after their promotion to the Premiership, paying £5.25million for 21-year-old
Tottenham winger
Nick Barmby and £4.75million for 22-year-old Brazilian midfielder
Juninho. The policy looked to have paid off as Boro stood fourth in the Premiership in October, but a terrible run of form followed and they slid to 12th place in the final table. Boro's dismal away form - just 8 goals in 19 games - also helped end their dreams of European football.
Robson paid £7million for Italian
Serie A striker
Fabrizio Ravanelli and £3million for Brazilian midfielder
Emerson during the summer of 1996, but Boro spent the season battling relegation instead of chasing a top-five finish. Their task was complicated by a 3 points deduction imposed just after Christmas, as punishment for the club's failure to fulfill a fixture against
Blackburn because so many players were absent due to injury or illness. The club's explanation was that so many of the squad had been laid low by 'flu that it coudn't field a competitive team, however
the Football Association rejected this explanation.
Meanwhile, Boro were building up an impressive cup run and reached the first professional cup final of their history in March, where they faced
Leicester City. The deadlock was not broken until extra time, when Fabrizio Ravanelli's goal looked to have secured the trophy for Boro. But Leicester then scored an equaliser and went on to win the replay.
Boro's 3-point deduction eventually cost them their Premiership status and they were relegated on the final day of the season. A week later they lost 2-0 to
Chelsea in the
F.A Cup final and became the first English club to finish in the last two of all three English major tournaments.
The board kept faith in Robson and they were rewarded with promotion back to the Premiership as Division One runners-up the following season. During this period, Robson also acted as a coach to the England team under
Terry Venables.Two more secure mid-table finishes followed, but Boro found themselves battling relegation come the 2000-01 season. Venables was appointed to work alongside Robson and they comfortably avoided the drop.
Reaching new heights under McClaren (2001 - 2006)
In the 2001 close season, Robson handed in his notice after seven years as manager and was replaced by
Steve McClaren - the
Manchester United assistant manager who was regarded as one of the finest coaches in Europe and was also one of the most prominent coaches in the England team. His first season saw Boro finish 12th in the Premiership and reach the
FA Cup semi finals.
An 11th place finish followed in 2002-03, a marginal improvement on the previous season's finish but slightly disappointing considering Middlesbrough's early season form suggested that they could qualify for Europe.
The following season, 2003-04, was easily the best in the club's history as they finally won a major trophy after beating
Bolton Wanderers 2-1 in the League Cup final. This success also ensured that Boro would qualify for Europe - the
UEFA Cup - for the first time.
They reached the last 16 of the competition and started the season very well hovering around the top 6 until November/December but a horrendous number of injuries almost sucked them into mid-table. UEFA cup qualification was reached after a 1-1 draw at the City of Manchester Stadium.
2005-06 was a mixed season for Middlesbrough. Dismal mid-season form saw them sucked into the bottom half of the Premiership, and at one stage they looked in real danger of being relegated (notably after their 7-0 loss to
Arsenal), although a subsequent recoveryâ€" which included a 3-0 win over eventual champions
Chelseaâ€" saw them finish fourteenth. In McClaren's last Premiership game against
Fulham Steve picked an all English 16 with 15 of the players (except
Malcolm Christie) coming from the local area and the average age of the team was less than 20,
Lee Cattermole was the captain for that match making himself Middlesbrough's youngest ever captain of the first team.
On Thursday 27th April 2006, Middlesbrough reached the
UEFA Cup final in
Eindhoven in May 2006 after defeating
Steaua Bucharest 4-3 on aggregate in stunning fashion being 3-0 down on aggregate after 25 minutes of the second leg. This was the second time in the competition that 'Boro found themselves 3-0 down after 25 mins of the return leg and yet still going through as they beat
FC Basel 4-3 in the Quarter Finals. On
4 May,
2006, McClaren was chosen to take over as the manager of the England national team after the 2006 World Cup. Martin O'Neill, Tony Mowbray and Alan Curbishley have been linked with the manager's job at Middlesbrough, with Steve Gibson expecting whoever takes the manager's job to achieve a Champions League place in the near future.
Boro fans watched from the stands as their Middlesbrough team lost 4-0 in the final to
Sevilla FC in
Eindhoven. Trailing Sevilla 0-1 at the break, McClaren opted for a very attacking line-up for the second half with four strikers, which had worked to great effect in the quarter and semi-finals. Middlesbrough were unlucky not to be awarded a penalty after what looked like a rather clumsy shove on Mark Viduka in the box. Nevertheless, Middlesbrough were forced to push on in desperate search of an equaliser, and as a result conceded 3 in the last 10 minutes. A 4-0 scoreline rather flattered the Spanish side despite their superior play over their English opponents.
The Southgate Era (2006 - Present)
In May 2006, the FA appointed
Steve McClaren as the new England Manager, so the Middlesbrough Chairman
Steve Gibson began the search for a new manager. His shortlist included three names -
Martin O'Neill,
Terry Venables and
Alan Curbishley. Martin O'Neill was the first to be approached but the two parties could not agree on a number of details including backroom staff and Martin O'Neill's insistence on initially wanting to work part time.
Terry Venables was then approached and a deal was thought to be done, but Venables after much agonising decided that he was too old to manage full time in the Premier League. Gibson then decided to go back to
Martin O'Neill after it was made clear that O'Neill was willing to soften his stance slightly if Middlesbrough would also give way on their demands. However neither party could come to an agreement over O'Neills working hours, thus leading to the club approaching Alan Curbishley over the spot, Curbishley was never involved in serious discussions with the club after he made it clear that he wants a break from football. Gibson then looked within his own club and has decided to make club captain
Gareth Southgate the next manager of Middlesbrough F.C. He has decided not to play for 'Boro' and be manager, but to just be manager. At an age of 35, he believes that he won't cope with both being manager and playing as captain.
George Boateng will be the
Captain, whom Southgate has known and played with for several years.
Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink,
Franck Queudrue and
Doriva have left.
Southgate's first major signing was the addition of the left sided Argentine
Julio Arca from local rivals
Sunderland A.F.C. Arca was snapped up for just £1.75m, which is a bargain considering that he is often regarded as one the best left sided players in the league. Many pundits applauded Southgate for his hard neogation stlye in completing the deal for Arca, stating that a player of Arca's quality for the amount of money Boro paid is a rare thing in modern football. Southgate also signed young Frenchman Herald Goulon from Olympic Lyon on a three year deal, hoping that he will develop into a first team player in the coming season's
Southgate is the second youngest manager in the
Premiership, but has shown promise in several friendlies, and has made a declaration that the team will be a fit, attacking side, and will use the team's youth to their advantage. He is signed to a five-year contract, which will most likely be extended if the club does well.
*Linthorpe Road -1903
*
Ayresome Park 1903-1995
*
League Cup winners
2003-
04; runners up
1996-
97,
1997-
98*
UEFA Cup runners up
2005-06*
FA Cup runners up
1996-97;
*
Football League First Division (new) champions
1994-
95; runners up
1997-
98*
Football League Second Division (old) champions
1926-
27,
1928-
29,
1973-
74; runners up
1901-
02,
1991-
92*
Football League Third Division (old) runners up
1966-
67,
1986-
87*
FA Amateur Cup winners
1894-
95,
1897-
98*
Anglo-Scottish Cup winners
1976*
Zenith Data Systems Cup Runners up
1990*'''
Coventry City 2 Middlesbrough 1,
FA Premier League, 15th August 1992
**Middlesbrough's first
Premiership match. They were relegated at the end of the season.
*'''
Leicester City 1 Middlesbrough 1,
League Cup Final, 1997
**Middlesbrough's first appearance in a major cup final. They lost the replay 1 - 0 at
Hillsborough.
*
Chelsea 2 Middlesbrough 0,
FA Cup Final, 1997
**Middlesbrough's first appearance in an FA Cup final. They conceded the fastest goal in a Wembley cup final to
Roberto di Matteo after 42 seconds.
*
Chelsea 2 Middlesbrough 0,
League Cup Final, 1998
**Middlesbrough made the final despite playing that season in the (then)
First Division. Boro held Chelsea well for ninety minutes, but extra time goals from
Frank Sinclair and
Roberto di Matteo gave Chelsea the trophy. It was also the Middlesbrough debut for
Paul Gascoigne, who was booked almost immediately after coming on as a substitute.
*
Middlesbrough 2 Bolton Wanderers 1,
League Cup Final, 2004
**Middlesbrough's first major trophy.
Joseph-Désiré Job scored the fastest goal in League Cup Final history, although his record was broken the following year by
Liverpool's John Arne Riise against
Chelsea.
Boudewijn Zenden doubled the lead in the seventh minute with a penalty, before
Kevin Davies pulled one back for Bolton midway through the first half.
*
Middlesbrough 3 BanÃk Ostrava 0,
UEFA Cup Round 1, 2004
**Middlesbrough's first match in European competition. They drew the return leg in the Czech Republic 1-1 to progress. They eventually made the last 16, going out to
Sporting Lisbon.
*
Arsenal 7 Middlesbrough 0,
FA Premier League 14 January 2006
**A very unfortunate game for Boro. The match was staged at
Highbury, and after
Thierry Henry's stunning volley which resulted in the first goal, the floodgates opened. Henry finished the game with a hattrick and other goal scorers were
Gilberto Silva,
Robert Pires,
Aleksandr Hleb, and
Philippe Senderos. It also remained the largest win for a team in the
2005-06 season.
*
Middlesbrough 3 Chelsea 0,
FA Premier League 11 Februrary 2006
**A huge upset that turned heads all over England. In the first minute,
Fabio Rochemback scored and then near the end of the half,
Stewart Downing struck giving Boro a 2-0 lead at half-time. Chelsea were unable to recover and Boro ultimatley sealed the victory after
Aiyegbeni Yakubu scored in the 67th minute.
*
Middlesbrough 4 Basel 1,
UEFA Cup Quarter Final 2nd Leg, 6th April 2006
**Arguably Middlesbrough's greatest ever match. 2-0 down from the first leg in Switzerland, Middlesbrough went 1-0 behind after 23 minutes and looked like they were going out of the tournament, needing four goals to go through.
Mark Viduka equalized in the 33rd minute to give them hope, before scoring a second after half-time.
Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink scored a superb long-range goal with twelve minutes left, before
Massimo Maccarone scored the winning goal in the very last minute, to jubilant celebrations at the
Riverside Stadium.
*
Middlesbrough 4 Charlton Athletic 2,
FA Cup Quarter Final Replay, 12 April 2006
**A match to rival the latter, Middlesbrough went into the match having drawn with Charlton, but this game was to be more exciting than at the Valley.
Fabio Rochemback's 30-yard free-kick gave the home side an unlikely lead but it was cancelled out by Bryan Hughes' volley.
James Morrison scored to give Boro the lead again, while in the second half Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink smashed in the third. Charlton subsitute Jay Bothroyd interfered in the Addicks' second, his shot bouncing off Gareth Southgate. But Boro restored their two goal advantage when Mark Viduka jinked past two Charlton defenders and put a scorching strike past Thomas Myhre. It was the second time in a fortnight that Middlesbrough got through to the semi-finals of important tournaments and set up a thrilling finale for the end of the season.
*
Middlesbrough 4 Steaua Bucharest 2 UEFA Cup Semi Final 2nd Leg, 27th April 2006
**In what seemed like a repeat of the previous
UEFA Cup match at the Riverside, Middlesbrough made it hard for themselves once again, already 1 - 0 down from the first leg, Dica made it 1 - 0 on the night then Goian made it 2 - 0 with a scrappy goal. Once again needing to score four goals in order to progress,
Massimo Maccarone scored in the 33rd minute to give them some hope of making a dramatic comeback. In the second half, a
Mark Viduka header on 64 minutes, a scrappy goal from
Chris Riggott and another late goal from
Maccarone completed another unlikely comeback.
*
Middlesbrough 0 Sevilla FC 4 UEFA Cup Final, 10th May 2006
** In what was
Steve McClaren's final game as Middlesbrough's manager before taking over as England manager from the departing
Sven-Göran Eriksson, Middlesbrough had the opportunity to become the lowest ranking club ever to win the UEFA cup (having finished 14th in their domestic league) However, a brace from
Enzo Maresca and goals from
LuÃs Fabiano and
Frédéric Kanouté gave Sevilla a 4-0 Win.
(captain)Out on loan
(on loan at
Sheffield Wednesday) (on loan at
Blackpool)
2006/2007 transfers
In:*
Herold Goulon - Signed
From Olympique Lyonnais*
Julio Arca - Signed
From Sunderland AFCOut:*
Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink - Released
Charlton Athletic*
Doriva - Released
*
Colin Cooper - Retired
*
Joseph Desire-Job - Released
*
Franck Queudrue - Transferred
To Fulham2006-Present
Gareth Southgate2001-06
Steve McClaren2001
Bryan Robson with
Terry Venables1994-2001
Bryan Robson1991-94
Lennie Lawrence1990-91
Colin Todd1986-90
Bruce Rioch1984-86
Willie Maddren1982-84
Malcolm Allison 1981-82
Bobby Murdoch1977-81
John Neal1973-77
Jack Charlton 1966-73 Stan Anderson
1963-66
Raich Carter 1954-63 Bob Dennison
1952-54 Walter Rowley
1944-52
David Jack 1934-44 Wilf Gillow
1927-34 Peter McWilliam
1923-26 Herbert Bamlett
1920-23 Jimmy Howie
1911-19 Tom McIntosh
1910-11 Andy Walker
1908-10 J Gunter
1906-09 Andy Aitken
1905-06 Alex Mackie
1899-05 John Robson
Listed according to year of Middlesbrough first-team debut (year in parentheses):*
Tim Williamson (1901)
*
Alf Common (1905)
*
Steve Bloomer (1906)
*
Jacky Carr (1911)
*
George Camsell (1925)
*
Wilf Mannion (1936)
*
George Hardwick (1937)
*
Dicky Robinson (1945)
*
Brian Clough (1955)
* John Hickton (1966)
* Jim Platt (1971)
* David Armstrong (1972)
*
Graeme Souness (1973)
*
Bobby Murdoch (1973)
*
Craig Johnston (1978)
*
Willie Maddren (1969)
*
Tony Mowbray (1982)
*
Colin Cooper (1985)
*
Bernie Slaven (1985)
*
Gary Pallister (1985)
*
Juninho (1995)
*
Fabrizio Ravanelli (1996)
*
Paul Ince (1999)
*
Gareth Southgate (2001)
*
Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink (2004)
* 1979 - 1980
Datsun Cleveland * 1982 - 1983
McClean Homes* 1986 - 1987
Camerons and
Hansa Beer* 1987 - 1988
Dickens* 1988 - 1990
Heritage Hampers* 1990 - 1992
Evening Gazette* 1992 - 1994
ICI* 1994 - 1995
Dickens* 1995 - 1999
Cellnet* 2000 - 2001
BT Cellnet* 2002 - 2004
Dial-a-Phone* 2004 - Present
888.comTheir kits are manufactured by
Errea*
* 1994-1998
Nigel Pearson* 1998-1999
Andy Townsend* 1999-2002
Paul Ince* 2002-2006
Gareth Southgate* 2006-Present
George Boateng*
Official website*
Supporters' fansite*
Supporters' fanzine*
4thegame.com's Middlesbrough page*
Middlesbrough - Premierleague.com