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Stoke City
2015–16
Club information
Manager Flag of Wales Mark Hughes
Stadium Britannia Stadium
League Season information
Final League position Premier League, 9th
Cup placements
FA Cup Fourth round
League Cup Semi-final
Season statistics
 ← 2014–15
2016–17 → 

The 2015–16 season was Stoke City's eighth season in the Premier League and the 60th in the top tier of English football.

After finishing ninth in 2014–15 for a second season running, Mark Hughes made a number of alterations to his squad in preparation for the 2015–16 campaign. Leaving the club were the long-serving trio of Asmir Begović, Robert Huth and Steven Nzonzi with Stoke receiving their record transfer fee in the process. With the money available Hughes broke Stoke's transfer record paying Inter Milan £12 million for Swiss winger Xherdan Shaqiri. He brought in Spanish striker Joselu for £5.75 million and Dutch midfielder Ibrahim Afellay. Also arriving at the Britannia Stadium were Shay Given, Jakob Haugaard, Glen Johnson and Marco van Ginkel.

Stoke made a poor start to their campaign as they failed to win any of their opening six matches, losing home matches 1–0 against Liverpool and West Bromwich Albion and drawing away against Norwich City and Tottenham Hotspur. City also lost to Arsenal and drew at home to Leicester City before claiming their first win against Bournemouth, which was followed up with away victories against Aston Villa and Swansea City. In December Stoke beat both Manchester clubs 2–0 and won 4–3 away at Everton as Stoke ended 2015 in a top half position.

Stoke also had a good run in the League Cup where after knocking out Luton Town, Fulham, Chelsea and Sheffield Wednesday they lost to Liverpool on penalties in the semi-final. Stoke were also knocked out of the FA Cup by Crystal Palace, and with both cup exits sandwiched between three consecutive 3–0 Premier League defeats it rounded up a poor start to 2016 for the Potters.

In the January transfer window Stoke broke their transfer record set in the summer paying Porto £18.3 million for midfielder Giannelli Imbula whilst Steve Sidwell and Marco van Ginkel both departed. Stoke's form improved as they defeated Bournemouth, Aston Villa, Newcastle United and Watford whilst they managed to claim their first Premier League point at Chelsea. However following an injury to Jack Butland Stoke lost their defensive solidarity conceding four goals in three consecutive matches against Liverpool, Tottenham Hotspur and Manchester City earning the team much criticism. They were able to recover though and defeated West Ham United on the final day to finish in ninth position for a third season running.

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Stoke City F.C.
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History: Seasons
Stoke City F.C. seasons

2015-16 · 2016-17 · 2017-18 · 2018-19 · 2019-20 · 2020-21 · 2021-22 · 2022-23 · 2023-24 · 2024-25 ·

Flag of England 2015–16 in English football
FA competitions
FA Cup (Qualifying Rounds, Final (men), Final (Women) · FA Community Shield · FA Trophy (Final) · FA Vase (Final)
League cups
Football League Cup (Final) · Football League Trophy (Final) · Northern Premier League Integro League Cup · Southern Football League Cup · Northern Counties East Football League Cup
Premier and Football League
Premier League · Football League (Championship · League One · League Two)

Play-offs · (Championship final · League One final · League Two final)

Football Conference
National League (National League · North · South)
Lower leagues
Isthmian League (Isthmian League Cup) · Northern Premier League · Southern Football League
European competitions
Champions League (Final) · Europa League (Final)
National teams
Senior (UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying Group E)
Other
Summer 2015 transfers · Winter 2015–16 transfers · Summer 2016 transfers
Club seasons
Premier League

Arsenal · Aston Villa · Bournemouth · Chelsea · Crystal Palace · Everton · Leicester City · Liverpool · Manchester City · Manchester United · Newcastle United · Norwich City · Southampton · Stoke City · Sunderland · Swansea City · Tottenham Hotspur · Watford · West Bromwich Albion · West Ham United

Championship

Birmingham City · Blackburn Rovers · Bolton Wanderers · Brentford · Brighton & Hove Albion · Bristol City · Burnley · Cardiff City · Charlton Athletic · Derby County · Fulham · Huddersfield Town · Hull City · Ipswich Town · Leeds United · Middlesbrough · Milton Keynes Dons · Nottingham Forest · Preston North End · Queens Park Rangers · Reading · Rotherham United · Sheffield Wednesday · Wolverhampton Wanderers

League One

Barnsley · Blackpool · Bradford City · Burton Albion · Bury · Chesterfield · Colchester United · Coventry City · Crewe Alexandra · Doncaster Rovers · Fleetwood Town · Gillingham · Millwall · Oldham Athletic · Peterborough United · Port Vale · Rochdale · Scunthorpe United · Sheffield United · Shrewsbury Town · Southend United · Swindon Town · Walsall · Wigan Athletic

League Two

Accrington Stanley · AFC Wimbledon · Barnet · Bristol Rovers · Cambridge United · Carlisle United · Crawley Town · Dagenham & Redbridge · Exeter City · Hartlepool United · Leyton Orient · Luton Town · Mansfield Town · Morecambe · Newport County · Northampton Town · Notts County · Oxford United · Plymouth Argyle · Portsmouth · Stevenage · Wycombe Wanderers · Yeovil Town · York City

National League

Aldershot Town · Altrincham · Barrow · Boreham Wood · Braintree Town · Bromley · Cheltenham Town · Chester · Dover Athletic · Eastleigh · Forest Green Rovers · Gateshead · Grimsby Town · Guiseley · Halifax Town · Kidderminster Harriers · Lincoln City · Macclesfield Town · Southport · Torquay United · Tranmere Rovers · Welling United · Woking · Wrexham

2014-15                                                        2016-17

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