Riverside Stadium

This article is about a football ground in Middlesbrough. For the baseball stadium now under a different name, see Metro Bank Park. For the cricket ground, see Riverside Ground. For football stadium in Drumahoe, Northern Ireland, see YMCA Grounds.
Riverside Stadium

A Panorama shot of the Riverside Stadium
Full name Riverside Stadium
Former names

Cellnet Riverside Stadium

BT Cellnet Riverside Stadium
Location Middlesbrough, England TS3 6RS
Coordinates 54°34′42″N 1°13′1″W / 54.57833°N 1.21694°W / 54.57833; -1.21694Coordinates: 54°34′42″N 1°13′1″W / 54.57833°N 1.21694°W / 54.57833; -1.21694
Owner Middlesbrough F.C.
Operator Middlesbrough F.C.
Capacity 33,746
Field size 115 x 75 yards (105 x 69 m)
Surface Grass
Construction
Built 1994–1995
Opened 26 August 1995
Construction cost £16 million[1]
Tenants
Middlesbrough F.C. (1995–present)

The Riverside Stadium is a football stadium in Middlesbrough, England, which has been the home of Middlesbrough F.C. since it opened in 1995. Its current capacity is 33,746[2] all seated, although there is provisional planning permission in place to expand that to 42,000 if required.[1]

History

The stadium was built to replace Ayresome Park after the Taylor Report, which required all top division football stadia to be all-seater. After the report was delivered in January 1990, Middlesbrough needed an all-seater stadium by August 1994, and were unable to expand Ayresome Park outwards owing to its location in a residential area, and expanding the stadium upwards would have limited the club to a capacity of around 20,000 seats – the club wanted a considerably larger capacity. The decision was taken by club officials to build a new stadium; Teesside Development Corporation offered them the Middlehaven site by the River Tees for development.

The new 30,000 seater stadium was constructed by Taylor Woodrow Construction[3] for £16 million, taking approximately nine months to complete after work began in the autumn of 1994. The name of the stadium was chosen by the club's fans, following a vote during the final game at Ayresome Park. The other choices available were Middlehaven Stadium, Erimus Stadium and Teesside Stadium. When first opened, the name was amended to Cellnet Riverside Stadium (and then BT Cellnet Riverside Stadium) as part of a £3 million sponsorship deal with Cellnet, but this deal ended after the 2001–02 season.[4]

The first game was played against Chelsea in front of a 28,286 crowd (the highest home attendance in 14 years) on 26 August 1995.[5] Middlesbrough won the game 2–0, with Craig Hignett taking the honour of scoring the first ever goal at the stadium, Jan Åge Fjørtoft scoring the second. Their first season at their new stadium was also their first back in the FA Premier League following promotion after two seasons away.

In their second season at the Riverside Stadium, Middlesbrough were runners-up in both of the domestic cups but a points deduction in the league meant that they were relegated from the Premier League.

In 1998 – when Middlesbrough were promoted back to the Premier League at the first attempt – the capacity was increased by 5,000 by filling in the north and south-west corners at a cost of £5 million. This expansion gave the stadium a 35,100 capacity. Reorganisation of the stadium has resulted in the capacity being reduced slightly to 34,988 in June 2008 and then to 34,742 for the start of the 2013–14 season.[6] A further reorganisation of the stadium for the start of the 2016-17 season has seen the capacity reduced again to 33,746. The club have the Council's permission to extend the stadium by another 7,000 if demand made it necessary, which would bring its capacity up to approximately 42,000.

War heroes in the Borobrick Road

In 2005 the club resurrected the old Ayresome Park gates which had been famously locked when the club went into liquidation. They were erected outside the Riverside Stadium as a reminder of the past. Another addition has been statues of former players, George Hardwick and Wilf Mannion. In front of the old Ayresome park gates is the location for the "Borobrick Road", where fans can pay to have a message inscribed on a brick (often in memory of a deceased family member) to be added to the road. For Armistice Day 2008, a set of bricks commemorating 8 players who died in the World Wars was unveiled.[7]

In July 2008, planning permission was granted by Middlesbrough Council to construct a wind turbine at the site of the stadium, standing 125 metres high and capable of generating 3 Megawatts of electricity. The turbine will be used to power the stadium, with the excess being sold to the National Grid.[8]

On 15 March 2013, it was announced that Conference National side Gateshead would stage a "home" game at the Riverside Stadium, after continual drainage problems at Gateshead International Stadium caused them to play their last 12 league games of the season at five different venues.[9][10][11]

Following the club's promotion to the Premier League at the end of the 2015/16 season, the ground underwent a £5m package of renovations designed to bring it up to the standards required of Premier League stadiums. Renovations included the installation of a large press box at the back of the East Stand, the construction of two permanent TV studios at the back of the South East Corner, with associated access and TV compound on the stadium's exterior, an internal reorganisation of the West Stand reception, tunnel and changing room area, new floodlights and refurbished concourse areas including the addition of new kiosks and card and contactless payment methods. The renovations resulted in a reduced capacity of 33,746.

International matches

Like its predecessor Ayresome Park, the Riverside Stadium has played host to international football. During the construction of the new Wembley Stadium, the England national football team toured the country, playing at varying grounds. The Riverside was chosen to host the Euro 2004 qualifying match against Slovakia on 11 June 2003.[12] England won the match 2–1 with a brace from Michael Owen after Vladimír Janočko had put Slovakia ahead. The match is also notable for pitting Middlesbrough's England defender Gareth Southgate against their own Slovakian striker at the time, Szilárd Németh.[13]

Date Result Competition
31 August 2000  England 6–1  Georgia Under-21 Friendly
4 September 2001  England 5–0  Albania 2002 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship qualification
11 June 2003  England 2–1  Slovakia 2004 UEFA European Football Championship qualification
7 August 2004  England 3–1  Ukraine Under-21 Friendly
29 March 2005  England 2–0  Azerbaijan 2006 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship qualification
29 February 2012  England 4–0  Belgium 2013 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship qualification
20 July 2012  Great Britain 0–0  Sweden 2012 London Olympic Women's Friendly
20 July 2012  Great Britain 0–2  Brazil 2012 London Olympic Men's Friendly
30 March 2015  England 3-2  Germany Under-21 Friendly

Team GB

On 24 April 2012 it was announced that The Riverside Stadium would host the only public warm up match for Team GB before the London 2012 Olympic Games against Brazil Olympic Football Team. Football stars including Ryan Giggs, Craig Bellamy, Thiago Silva, Neymar, Lucas Moura, Hulk and even Middlesbrough's Jason Steele all featured in the match in which Brazil Olympic Football Team outclassed Team GB winning 2–0 with 12 shots on target for Brazil compared to the 1 shot on target achieved by Team GB.

Details

Stadium

The stadium is fully enclosed with every seat offering an uninterrupted view of the pitch. The four main stands are commonly known as the North, East, West and South stands. The corners are referred to as the North-East, North-West, South-East and South-West corners. Concourses run around the entirety of the ground with kiosks serving food and drink.

The North stand backs on to the River Tees and is where the majority of the more vocal home support congregates, and thus is also known as the New Holgate End in reference the Holgate End at Ayresome Park, where the similar vocal supporters were located.

The West stand runs along the length of the pitch and is the stadium's largest stand. The stand contains a number of executive boxes along its length as well as restaurants etc. The stand houses the changing rooms, and the players tunnel emerges from the middle of the stand. White seating in the top tier spells out the club's nickname "BORO".

The East stand greets the players as they walk out the tunnel. The main television gantry was reallocated to the top of the stand from the west stand in 2016. White seating in the top tier of the stand spells out "MFC". The roof houses five flagpoles with various flags flying, usually representing the league and cup competitions the club are participating in, as well as a flag of the team crest. A new press box was installed at the back of this stand in preparation for the club's re-entry into the Premier League. The East stand houses a Family Zone (North east end) and also visiting supporters (South East Corner). Prior the 2016/17 season, two permanent television studios were installed at the back of the South East Corner, either side of the existing giant TV screen.

The South stand has previously housed visiting supporters (now relocated to the East stand) but is currently (2013/14 season) occupied by home supporters including the vocal Red Faction.

Records

Average attendances

2002–2009 data for FA Premier League games only.

Season Attendance
2002–0331,025
2003–0430,398
2004–0532,012
2005–0628,463
2006–0726,092
2007–0826,708
2008–0928,429

Championship Attendances

Season Attendance
2009–1019,948
2010–1116,269
2011–1217,558
2012–1316,794
2013–1415,748
2014-1519,562
2015-1624,627

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Boro FC Club Information". gazettelive.co.uk. Retrieved 25 February 2007.
  2. Glover, Andrew (18 July 2016). "Riverside's new capacity confirmed after stadium's summer refit". Retrieved 18 July 2016.
  3. "The Riverside Stadium Info". MFC.co.uk. Middlesbrough F.C. Retrieved 9 April 2011.
  4. Boro FC club info, The Riverside Stadium – Gazette Live
  5. Boro 2 Chelsea 0, 26 August 1995 | Middlesbrough | History | Great Games |Great Games Archived 8 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
  6. "About the Riverside Stadium". MFC Website. 24 May 2014. Retrieved 14 January 2015.
  7. www.mfc.co.uk Boro remember fallen heroes
  8. "Boro wind turbine given go ahead". Evening Gazette. 8 July 2008. Retrieved 8 July 2008.
  9. "Ebbsfleet Game at Boro". Gateshead FC. 15 March 2013. Retrieved 15 March 2013.
  10. "Hyde Game at Croft Park". Gateshead FC. 28 February 2013. Retrieved 15 March 2013.
  11. "Media Watch – Gateshead look at alternatives". Gateshead FC. 13 February 2013. Retrieved 15 March 2013.
  12. "Riverside to host Slovakia clash". BBC Sport. 30 January 2003. Retrieved 18 May 2008.
  13. "Clockwatch: Euro 2004 qualifiers". BBC Sport. 11 June 2008. Retrieved 18 May 2008.
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