Middlesbrough had previously played at
Linthorpe Road West cricket ground, but election to the
Football League meant that an improved stadium was required. Ayresome Park was built at Paradise Field, adjacent to the old
Paradise Ground of
Middlesbrough Ironopolis, who had played in the Football League in the
1893–94 season. The highest attendance at the ground (53,802) was set on 27 December 1949, when Middlesbrough played their
North East rivals
Newcastle United. Ayresome Park was also one of the venues for the
1966 FIFA World Cup. Three games were played at the ground, involving the
Soviet Union,
North Korea,
Italy and
Chile. North Korea famously beat Italy 1–0 at the ground, to knock one of the most powerful footballing nations out of the tournament and in the process, advance the Koreans to the quarter-finals. The attendances at Ayresome Park, however, were among the lowest in the tournament, with a low of 15,887 fans at the game for
North Korea versus
Chile. Middlesbrough famously had to play their first home game of the
1986–87 season at
Hartlepool because they were locked out of Ayresome Park by the
bailiffs, due to huge debts which almost put the club out of business. However, they were soon back at Ayresome Park after a takeover deal saved the club, with their attendances and fortunes on the pitch both improving almost immediately. Despite this crisis, a £1.2 million sports centre was opened at the stadium on 3 March 1986 after a six-year delay caused by fire and safety regulations. By the early 1990s, the stadium was showing its age and clearly in need of major work to bring it up to date. The demands of the
Taylor Report meant that all stadiums in the highest two divisions of English football had to be all-seater by the start of the
1994–95 season. The surrounding residential area gave limited scope for expansion to an all-seater capacity of no more than 20,000, and with the club wanting a considerably bigger capacity, by 1993 the decision had been made to relocate the club to a new site in the town's docks area. Plans for
a new 30,000-seat stadium on the banks of the
River Tees were given the go-ahead in the spring of 1994, and construction work began that autumn, with the new stadium being ready for the
1995–96 season; when it became the first new stadium to be built by a top division club since
Manchester City moved to
Maine Road in 1923. The final competitive game at Ayresome Park was played against
Luton Town on 30 April 1995 in a match which Boro won 2–1 to secure the Division One title and promotion to the
Premier League, two years after being relegated. It was also a fine first season in management for the club's new manager
Bryan Robson.
John Hendrie, a key player for Boro during the first half of the 1990s, earned the honour of scoring the final competitive goal at Ayresome Park. The very last game at the ground was a sell-out testimonial match for long-serving goalkeeper
Stephen Pears, who scored the ground's final goal, scoring from the penalty spot in a 3–1 win for
Peter Beardsley's select XI against the Middlesbrough promotion winning side. The select XI's other goals were scored by Beardsley and
Bernie Slaven;
Paul Wilkinson scoring the Boro's only goal. Boro received the First Division Championship Trophy following the game. Ayresome Park was retained as a training ground for a year until a new facility was opened, and it was finally demolished in early 1997. The site of the stadium is now a park and garden. To commemorate the old ground, the gates of Ayresome Park have been erected outside the main entrance to the club's new ground, the
Riverside Stadium. ==1966 World Cup matches at Ayresome Park==