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Middlesbrough flop part of ‘disastrous’ £50m transfer window in exile as contract terminated

Middlesbrough have been trying to secure promotion to the Premier League since their ill-fated relegation in 2016/17.

Once an established Premier League club, it’s now been eight years since Boro have graced the top flight of English football.

Middlesbrough spent just one campaign back in England’s premier division under Aitor Karanka, who was sacked in March 2017 with the club firmly in a relegation battle.

Results did not improve upon his departure, however, and the Teessiders went down along with rivals Sunderland and Hull City.

Boro have come close to securing a return to the Premier League, finishing in the play-offs twice and seventh on two occasions, but their efforts have been in vain, in no small part due to several years of questionable recruitment.

Season Middlesbrough league position

2017/18 5th

2018/19 7th

2019/20 17th

2020/21 10th

2021/22 7th

2022/23 4th

2023/24 8th

Photo by Alex Dodd - CameraSport via Getty Images

Photo by Alex Dodd – CameraSport via Getty Images

Middlesbrough flop Britt Assombalonga has contract terminated

Fans of the North East outfit became very accustomed to poor recruitment prior to Kieran Scott’s arrival, and even in 2024/25, club legend Bernie Slaven has slammed Middlesbrough for their January signings.

While the most recent window was not great, it still wasn’t anywhere near as bad as the summer of 2017.

Boro signed 11 senior players, spending, as per Hartleepool Mail, somewhere in the region of £50m.

Player Signed from

Britt Assombalonga Nottingham Forest

Martin Braithwaite Toulouse

Ashley Fletcher West Ham

Jonny Howson Norwich City

Darren Randolph West Ham

Ryan Shotton Birmingham City

Cyrus Christie Derby County

Marvin Johnson Oxford United

Lewis Wing Shildon AFC

Lewis Baker Chelsea (loan)

Connor Roberts Swansea City (loan)

Barring Jonny Howson, who is still currently plying his trade at the Riverside Stadium, and perhaps Darren Randolph for a period, all of those additions proved to be a huge waste of money.

This dire spending led former manager Tony Pulis to claim in 2020 that ‘the window Middlesbrough had before I joined was probably the most disastrous one that the football club have ever had.’

One of the biggest disappointments from that nightmare window was Britt Assombalonga, who had scored 30 goals and assisted two in 69 matches for Nottingham Forest before making the move to Teesside.

After failing to replicate that form with Boro, their record signing eventually left the club on a free transfer in August 2021 for Adana Demirspor.

He then had a spell with Watford before two more stints in Turkey, most recently lining out for Amed SK.

However, after less than a year with the Turkish outfit, Assombalonga had his contract terminated in February 2025 and has been unable to find a new club since.

Teşekkürler Britt Assombalonga!

Profesyonel futbolcumuz Britt Assombalonga ile karşılıklı anlaşarak yollarımızı ayırmış bulunmaktayız. Kendisine verdiği emekler için teşekkür ediyor ve kariyerinde başarılar diliyoruz. pic.twitter.com/nsZZlYClSX

— AMED SK (@AmedsporSK) February 12, 2025

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Middlesbrough record signings

Eight years on, Assombalonga remains Middlesbrough’s most expensive signing, taking the place of another centre-forward who flopped in the North East, Afonso Alves.

But barring the aforementioned duo and perhaps Jordan Rhodes – though his limited goal contributions were key to Boro winning promotion in 2015/16 – the Reds’ most expensive signings have, for the most part, had solid careers in the North East.

Player Transfer fee

Britt Assombalonga £14.46m

Afonso Alves £14.38m

Ugo Ehiogu £10.32m

Jordan Rhodes £10.07m

Martin Braithwaite £9.56m

Marten de Roon £8.88m

Fabrizio Ravanelli £8.27m

Yakubu Aiyegbeni £8.24m

Gareth Southgate £8.24m

Jonathan Woodgate £8.12m

Fabrizio Ravanelli is one of the most talented players to ever line out for Boro, while Gareth Southgate and Ugo Ehiogu played key roles in the club’s League Cup triumph of 2004 and in Middlesbrough reaching the UEFA Cup final two years later.

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