This seems a good place to mention the Jamie Hoyland Black Hole, where forgettable players go to hide.
Jamie Hoyland came to the Lane in the summer of 1990 with a good reputation. He was the son of a former Blade and had looked good in the third tier for Bury so there were some high hopes for him.
Hoyland stayed with us for 4 and a half seasons and did some good things occasionally (most notably scoring when we knocked Man Utd out of the cup; I also remember a superb header in 1991-2 against Palace, finishing a move he began) but mostly he was a bit invisible, despite playing in the centre of the park, and found it hard to hold down a place.
This started a 25 year run where almost every season we had someone in the Jamie Hoyland Black Hole, a central midfielder who we signed, often with a good reputation, who didn't really do much of anything. They usually didn't look bad, like, say Ian Hamilton or Jonathan Hunt could look bad, or as Monty could often look bad: he wasn't hiding at least. You just didn't really notice them.
The black hole occupants:
1990-94 Jamie Hoyland
1995 Paul Holland
(Gap when we had Gordon Cowans, amongst others)
1996-7 Nigel Spackman
1998-2002 Bobby Ford
(Gap for the Brown/McCall years)
2004-5 Paul Thirlwell
2005-6 Gary Flitcroft (mercifully brief spell)
2006-7 Mikel Leigertwood
2007-8 Lee Hendrie
2008-9 Brian "Fordy" Howard
2009-10 James Harper
2010-11 Leon "Emperor's New Clothes" Britton
(2011-12 didn't have a player like this in the middle, though Ryan Flynn hid out on the wing a lot)
2012-13 Barry Robson
2013-14 Stephen McGinn
2014-15 Louis Reed
2015-16 Dean Hammond
The Black Hole disappeared after Paul Coutts went on the transfer list.
If I had to pick the most anonymous season, I'd choose Dean Hammond and his unseen work in 2016, a season so colourless that Paul Coutts could play 32 games of what
Deadbat memorably called "neat and tidy nothingness" and was arguably more influential.
In second place I'd have Paul Thirlwell: 30 games and 1 goal, and zero memories of anything he did aside from score that goal.
Stephen McGinn takes third for his 30 league and 7 cup appearances in 2013-14. A memorable season for so many reasons, and yet I can't bring to mind a single thing he did.
It's tough to leave Bobby Ford out of the top 3 but he did pop up with the odd goal and he scored against the Pigs, so he has that going for him. It is not a coincidence we stopped being good when he signed and started being good again when he went.
Isn't it nice that we have midfielders who all do things? More evidence Wilder knows what he's doing.