Computicket - Online Ticket Sales  
Buy your Tickets in Advance and Save up to 80% - Discounted Online Ticket Sales

Ferry Tickets | Train Tickets | Flight Tickets | Sport Tickets | Attraction Tickets | Extras

Middlesbrough Football Tickets

 
Buy your Guaranteed Official Middlesbrough Match Tickets

An FA Premier League Team

Middlesbrough Tickets - Get tickets for any game at Computicket.co.uk

Book Middlesbrough Premiership Football Tickets through Computicket

Book any of Middlesbrough's 38 league fixtures as well as all cup fixtures online here at Computicket.co.uk. As a specialist in Premier League football tickets we are the answer to getting hold of tickets for Sold Out Fixtures. With Premier League football becoming more and more popular demand for tickets is high. Computicket has an allocation of official match tickets to each and every Middlesbrough fixture so dont miss out, reserve your ticket online today with Computicket.co.uk.

Here at Computicket.co.uk we offer tickets for each and every Middlesbrough Premier League and Cup match.


With Middlesbrough tickets in such high demand trust Computicket.co.uk to bring you Guaranteed Official Match Tickets. We source tickets for every match and offer tickets in a range of price bands. The tickets will be slightly above face value but you can rest assured that your tickets are 100% official with our Ticket Guarantee. Enjoy the Game! ...... COME ON YOU IRONS!!


To Buy Tickets for Any Middlesbrough League or Cup match - Click The "Buy Tickets!" Button.
This will take you to the results page where you will be able to select tickets for the match of your choice.
Buy Football Tickets From Computicket.co.uk

Middlesbrough's Riverside Stadium - Be there with official tickets from Computicket.co.uk

Middlesbrough Information and History

Middlesbrough Club Information

Latest Middlesbrough Football News

[an error occurred while processing this directive]

About Middlesbrough Football Club

Formed in 1876, Middlesbrough have played at the 35,100 capacity Riverside Stadium since August 1995, their third ground since turning professional in 1889. They were founding members of the Premier League in 1992. The club's main rivals are Newcastle United and Sunderland.

The club's highest league finish to date was third in the 1913–14 season and they have only spent two seasons outside of the Football League's top two divisions. The club came close to folding in 1986 after experiencing severe financial difficulties before the club was saved by a consortium led by then board member and current chairman Steve Gibson. Middlesbrough were controversially deducted three points for failing to fulfil a fixture against Blackburn Rovers during the 1996-97 Premier League season and were subsequently relegated. They were promoted the following season and are now in their eleventh consecutive season in the top division. Middlesbrough won the League Cup in 2004, the club's first and only major trophy.

Middlesbrough Supporters

Traditionally supporters come from Middlesbrough itself and towns in the immediate area. Middlesbrough have one of the highest proportions in Britain of locally-born season ticket holders at 80%, and one of the highest proportions of female fans at 20%. A survey at the start of the 2007–08 season found Middlesbrough supporters were the seventh loudest set of fans in the Premier League.

Middlesbrough Official Supporters Club, which features their own team in the local football league, has links with supporters' clubs across the globe. The largest supporters' clubs include the Official Supporters' Club, the Middlesbrough Disabled Supporters' Association, Yarm Reds, and Middlesbrough Supporters South.

Middlesbrough Colours and Crest

Middlesbrough's original home kit upon election to the Football League in 1899 was a white home shirt with blue shorts and they did not adopt their colours of red and white until later that season. Previous kits included a white shirt with a blue and white polka dotted collar from around 1889. The Middlesbrough kit has remained broadly the same over the years with a red shirt and socks and either red or white shorts. The distinctive broad white stripe across the chest was introduced by Jack Charlton in 1973 (following an attempt to change the home shirt to a Leeds United-style white shirt) and brought back for a one-off in 1997–98 and then again for the 2000–01 and 2004–05 seasons due to popular demand. The club subsequently announced in December 2007 that the club would allow the fans to decide via an online and text vote whether the white band should return for the following season. On 8 January 2008 the club announced that the white band was to return, with 77.4% of voters voting in its favour, with the fans to choose the final shirt design from a selection of three designs, of which the winner was announced on 7 May 2008.

The Middlesbrough crest has gone through four changes since the formation of the club. Initially, the badge was simply the town of Middlesbrough's crest with a red lion instead of a blue lion in order to fit in with the club's colours. Following the adoption of the white band on the shirts in 1973, only the red lion remained with the letters "M.F.C" underneath in red. This was further adapted following the reformation of the club in 1986 to a circular crest with the lion in the middle and the words "Middlesbrough Football Club 1986" around the circle in order to reflect this new era. In 2007, Middlesbrough changed their crest once again, this time with the lion inside a shield and the words "Middlesbrough Football Club 1876" underneath. The club stated that this was to reflect the club's long history and not just their post-liquidation status

Stadia

After formation in 1876, and with the club still amateurs, Middlesbrough's first two years of football were played at Albert Park in Middlesbrough. After seeing the damage being caused by players and supporters, the Park Committee ordered the club to find an alternate venue. The club moved to Breckon Hill, behind the present-day Middlesbrough College, after agreeing to rent the land from its owner. However, two years later in 1880, the owner increased the rent and the club decided to move. They moved into the Linthorpe Road Ground in 1882, home at the time of Middlesbrough Cricket Club. The cricket club departed in 1893–94 to move to the Breckon Hill field, and Middlesbrough Football Club became sole users of the ground.[

With the club's growing size, and entry to the Football League, they had to move to a new ground in 1903, Ayresome Park. It was designed by Archibald Leitch and would be the club's home for the next 92 years. Following the Taylor Report in 1990, the ground either needed modernising or the club needed a new stadium. The club decided on the latter, and moved out at the end of the 1994–95 season. It was used as a training ground during 1995–96, before it was demolished in 1997 and a housing estate built in its place. The club now trains at a £7m complex at Rockliffe Park, in Hurworth, on the outskirts of Darlington.

The Riverside Stadium, named by the supporters of the club after a vote, became the club's home in 1995. It was the first stadium to be built in line with the Taylor Report's recommendations on all-seater stadia for clubs in the top two divisions of the English football league system. It was originally a 30,000 seater stadium, constructed for a modest fee of £16 million, before it was expanded in 1998 to its 35,100 capacity for an extra £5 million.

 
 

Computicket are an affiliate partner of Euroteam, a privately owned company engaged in the business of buying
and selling tickets and hospitality packages for sports and cultural events. Euroteam or Computicket is in no way
affiliated with any official organizer, venue or box office. The company/organisation logo(s) used on this
website are used herein only to reflect the product being promoted and for no other purpose whatsoever.

Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Links

Please Note: Images and logos used on this website are used herein only to reflect the product
being promoted and for no other purpose whatsoever. Computicket.co.uk Copyright Reserved