Tony Pulis has not made many signings this summer, but the ones he has made have been big ones. 

So far they have brought in Paddy McNair from Sunderland and Aden Flint from Bristol City

Another man they are reportedly interested in is Maccabi Tel Aviv striker Vidar Orn Kjartansson, according to the Mirror's live blog (20/07/18, 20.18pm).

Boro already have Britt Assombalonga, Patrick Bamford, Ashley Fletcher and Martin Braithwaite at the club, but Kjartansson's record is an impressive one.

He scored 10 times in 20 appearances for Tel Aviv last season but first came to everyone's attention in 2013/14 when he scored 31 goals in 33 matches for Valerenga Oslo.

He accepted a move to China after that and continued his fine goalscoring form before moving to Maccabi Tel Aviv.

Boro will apparently face competition from West Brom and QPR for the striker's signature who are all interested in bringing the Icelandic forward in.

But would this be a good signing for Boro?

We discuss...

Jay Williams

If I were Tony Pulis, I would try to reconcile with Britt Assombalonga before pursuing this deal.

Middlesbrough do not necessarily need a new striker if he keeps Assombalonga and Martin Braithwaite to compete with Pat Bamford and Rudy Gestede.

Boro also have Ashley Fletcher as a potential fifth choice and these are probably better than spending £3.5m on a risky and unproven signing.

George Dagless

Pulis obviously likes him, but is he really needed?

Boro have good quality around the pitch and I don't see that Kjartansson improves their first team.

Louie Chandler

There aren't many teams with striking options as fruitful as Boro's are.

Kjartansson would not be an upgrade on any of them so it would not be a good signing.

Christian Fuller

If Middlesbrough can pull off the signing of Kjartansson this summer, it will provide Tony Pulis with some big attacking decisions to make.

Kjartansson certainly has what it takes to make it as a first choice striker in the Championship, but with a number of other striking options, it would leave Pulis spoilt for choice.