Liverpool F.C.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Liverpool Football Club (
) is a
Premier League football club based in
Liverpool,
England. The club
has won more European trophies than any other English team with five
European Cups, three
UEFA Cups and three
UEFA Super Cups. They have also won 18
League titles, seven
FA Cups, a record eight
League Cups, and 15
FA Community Shields,
though they are yet to win a Premier League title since its inception
in 1992, having finished in second place on three occasions since.
The club was founded in 1892 and joined the
Football League the following year. They have played at
Anfield
since its formation. Liverpool established itself as a major force in
both English and European football during the 1970s and '80s when
Bill Shankly and
Bob Paisley led the club to 11 League titles and seven European trophies. Under the management of
Rafa Benítez and captained by
Steven Gerrard Liverpool re-emerged as European champions once again, winning the
2005 UEFA Champions League Final against
Milan in spite of being 3–0 down at half time.
Liverpool was the
ninth highest-earning football club in the world for 2013–14, with an annual revenue of €306 million,
[3] and the world's
eighth most valuable football club in 2015, valued at $982 million.
[4] The club holds many long-standing rivalries, most notably with
Manchester United and the
Merseyside derby with
Everton.
The club's supporters have been involved in two major tragedies. The first was the
Heysel Stadium disaster in 1985, where escaping fans were pressed against a collapsing wall in the
Heysel Stadium, with 39 people—mostly Italians and
Juventus fans—losing their lives, after which English clubs were given a five-year ban from European competition. The second was the
Hillsborough disaster in 1989, where 96 Liverpool supporters lost their lives in a
crush
against perimeter fencing. The team changed from red shirts and white
shorts to an all-red home strip in 1964 which has been used ever since.
The club's anthem is "
You'll Never Walk Alone".
History
Liverpool F.C. was founded following a dispute between the
Everton committee and
John Houlding, club president and owner of the land at
Anfield. After eight years at the stadium, Everton relocated to
Goodison Park in 1892 and Houlding founded Liverpool F.C. to play at Anfield.
[5]
Originally named "Everton F.C. and Athletic Grounds Ltd" (Everton
Athletic for short), the club became Liverpool F.C. in March 1892 and
gained official recognition three months later, after
The Football Association refused to recognise the club as Everton. The team won the
Lancashire League in its début season, and joined the
Football League Second Division at the start of the 1893–94 season. After finishing in first place the club was promoted to the
First Division, which it won in 1901 and again in 1906.
Liverpool reached its first
FA Cup Final in
1914, losing 1–0 to
Burnley.
It won consecutive League championships in 1922 and 1923, but did not
win another trophy until the 1946–47 season, when the club won the First
Division for a fifth time under the control of ex-
West Ham Utd centre half
George Kay. Liverpool suffered its second Cup Final defeat in 1950, playing against Arsenal. The club was relegated to the Second Division in the 1953–54 season. Soon after Liverpool lost 2–1 to non-league
Worcester City in the 1958–59 FA Cup,
Bill Shankly
was appointed manager. Upon his arrival he released 24 players and
converted a boot storage room at Anfield into a room where the coaches
could discuss strategy; here, Shankly and other "
Boot Room" members
Joe Fagan,
Reuben Bennett, and
Bob Paisley began reshaping the team.
Statue of
Bill Shankly outside
Anfield. Shankly won promotion to the First Division and the club's first league title since 1947.
The club was promoted back into the First Division in 1962 and won it
in 1964, for the first time in 17 years. In 1965, the club won its
first FA Cup. In 1966, the club won the First Division but lost to
Borussia Dortmund in the
European Cup Winners' Cup final.
[12] Liverpool won both the League and the
UEFA Cup
during the 1972–73 season, and the FA Cup again a year later. Shankly
retired soon afterwards and was replaced by his assistant, Bob Paisley.
In 1976, Paisley's second season as manager, the club won another
League and UEFA Cup double. The following season, the club retained the
League title and won the
European Cup
for the first time, but it lost in the 1977 FA Cup Final. Liverpool
retained the European Cup in 1978 and regained the First Division title
in 1979.
During Paisley's nine seasons as manager Liverpool won 21 trophies,
including three European Cups, a UEFA Cup, six League titles and three
consecutive
League Cups; the only domestic trophy he did not win was the FA Cup.
Paisley retired in 1983 and was replaced by his assistant, Joe Fagan.
Liverpool won the League, League Cup and European Cup in Fagan's first
season, becoming the first English side to win three trophies in a
season. Liverpool reached the European Cup final again in 1985, against
Juventus at the
Heysel Stadium.
Before kick-off, Liverpool fans breached a fence which separated the
two groups of supporters, and charged the Juventus fans. The resulting
weight of people caused a retaining wall to collapse, killing 39 fans,
mostly Italians. The incident became known as the
Heysel Stadium disaster.
The match was played in spite of protests by both managers, and
Liverpool lost 1–0 to Juventus. As a result of the tragedy, English
clubs were banned from participating in European competition for five
years; Liverpool received a ten-year ban, which was later reduced to six
years. Fourteen Liverpool fans received convictions for involuntary
manslaughter.
[18]
The Hillsborough memorial, which is engraved with the names of the 96 people who died in the
Hillsborough disaster.
Fagan had announced his retirement just before the disaster and
Kenny Dalglish was appointed as
player-manager. During his tenure, the club won another three League Championships and two FA Cups, including a League and Cup "
Double" in the 1985–86 season. Liverpool's success was overshadowed by the
Hillsborough disaster: in an FA Cup semi-final against
Nottingham Forest on 15 April 1989, hundreds of Liverpool fans were crushed against perimeter fencing.
[20]
Ninety-four fans died that day; the 95th victim died in hospital from
his injuries four days later and the 96th died nearly four years later,
without regaining consciousness.
[21] After the Hillsborough disaster there was a government review of stadium safety. The resulting
Taylor Report
paved the way for legislation that required top-division teams to have
all-seater stadiums. The report ruled that the main reason for the
disaster was overcrowding due to a failure of police control.
[22]
Liverpool was involved in the closest finish to a league season during the 1988–89 season. Liverpool finished equal with
Arsenal on both points and goal difference, but lost the title on total goals scored when Arsenal scored the final goal in the
last minute of the season.
[23]
Dalglish cited the Hillsborough disaster and its repercussions as the
reason for his resignation in 1991; he was replaced by former player
Graeme Souness.
Under his leadership Liverpool won the 1992 FA Cup Final, but their
league performances slumped, with two consecutive sixth-place finishes,
eventually resulting in his dismissal in January 1994. Souness was
replaced by
Roy Evans,
and Liverpool went on to win the 1995 Football League Cup Final. While
they made some title challenges under Evans, third-place finishes in
1996 and 1998 were the best they could manage, and so
Gérard Houllier was appointed co-manager in the 1998–99 season, and became the sole manager in November 1998 after Evans resigned.
[25] In 2001, Houllier's second full season in charge, Liverpool won a "
Treble": the FA Cup, League Cup and UEFA Cup.
[26] Houllier underwent major heart surgery during the 2001–02 season and Liverpool finished second in the League, behind Arsenal.
[27] They won a further League Cup in 2003, but failed to mount a title challenge in the two seasons that followed.
Houllier was replaced by
Rafael Benítez at the end of the 2003–04 season. Despite finishing fifth in Benítez's first season, Liverpool won the
2004–05 UEFA Champions League, beating
A.C. Milan 3–2 in a
penalty shootout after the match ended with a score of 3–3.
[28] The following season, Liverpool finished third in the Premier League and won the 2006 FA Cup Final, beating
West Ham United in a penalty shootout after the match finished 3–3.
[29] American businessmen
George Gillett and
Tom Hicks
became the owners of the club during the 2006–07 season, in a deal
which valued the club and its outstanding debts at £218.9 million.
[30] The club reached the 2007 UEFA Champions League Final against Milan, as it had in 2005, but lost 2–1.
[31] During the 2008–09 season Liverpool achieved 86 points, its highest Premier League points total, and finished as runners up to
Manchester United.
[32]
In the 2009–10 season, Liverpool finished seventh in the Premier
League and failed to qualify for the Champions League. Benítez
subsequently left by mutual consent
[33] and was replaced by
Fulham manager
Roy Hodgson.
[34]
At the start of the 2010–11 season Liverpool was on the verge of
bankruptcy and the club's creditors asked the High Court to allow the
sale of the club, overruling the wishes of Hicks and Gillett.
John W. Henry, owner of the
Boston Red Sox and of
Fenway Sports Group, bid successfully for the club and took ownership in October 2010.
[35]
Poor results during the start of that season led to Hodgson leaving the
club by mutual consent and former player & manager Kenny Dalglish
taking over.
[36] Despite a record 8th League Cup success against
Cardiff
and an FA Cup final defeat to Chelsea, Liverpool finished in eighth
position in the 2011–12 season, the worst league finish in 18 years and
led to the sacking of Dalglish.
[37][38] He was replaced by
Brendan Rodgers.
[39] In Rodgers'
first season,
Liverpool finished in seventh. In the 2013–14 season, Liverpool mounted
an unexpected title charge to finish second behind champions
Manchester City and subsequently return to the Champions League, scoring 101 goals in the process, the most since the 106 scored in the
1895–96 season.
[40][41]
Following a disappointing 2014–15 season, where Liverpool finished
sixth in the league, and a poor start to the 2015–16 season, Brendan
Rodgers was sacked in October 2015.
[42] He was replaced by
Jürgen Klopp,
[43] who became the third foreign manager in Liverpool's history.
[44]
Colours and badge
Liverpool's home colours worn from 1892 to 1896
[45]
For much of Liverpool's history its home colours have been all red,
but when the club was founded its kit was more like the contemporary
Everton kit. The blue and white quartered shirts were used until 1894,
when the club adopted the city's colour of red.
[5] The city's symbol of the
liver bird
was adopted as the club's badge in 1901, although it was not
incorporated into the kit until 1955. Liverpool continued to wear red
shirts and white shorts until 1964, when manager Bill Shankly decided to
change to an all red strip.
[45] Liverpool played in all red for the first time against
Anderlecht, as
Ian St. John recalled in his autobiography:
-
He [Shankly] thought the colour scheme would carry psychological
impact—red for danger, red for power. He came into the dressing room one
day and threw a pair of red shorts to Ronnie Yeats. "Get into those
shorts and let's see how you look", he said. "Christ, Ronnie, you look
awesome, terrifying. You look 7ft tall." "Why not go the whole hog,
boss?" I suggested. "Why not wear red socks? Let's go out all in red."
Shankly approved and an iconic kit was born.[46]
The Liverpool away strip has more often than not been all yellow or
white shirts and black shorts, but there have been several exceptions.
An all grey kit was introduced in 1987, which was used until the 1991–92
centenary season, when it was replaced by a combination of green shirts
and white shorts. After various colour combinations in the 1990s,
including gold and navy, bright yellow, black and grey, and
ecru,
the club alternated between yellow and white away kits until the
2008–09 season, when it re-introduced the grey kit. A third kit is
designed for European away matches, though it is also worn in domestic
away matches on occasions when the current away kit clashes with a
team's home kit. The current kits are designed by
Warrior Sports, who became the club's kit providers at the start of the 2012–13 season.
[47] In February 2015, Warrior's parent company
New Balance announced it would be entering the global football market, with teams sponsored by Warrior now being outfitted by New Balance.
[48] The only other branded shirts worn by the club were made by
Umbro until 1985, when they were replaced by
Adidas, who produced the kits until 1996 when
Reebok took over. They produced the kits for ten years before Adidas made the kits from 2006 to 2012.
A version of Liverpool's Crest as depicted on the Shankly Gates
Liverpool was the first English professional club to have a sponsor's logo on its shirts, after agreeing a deal with
Hitachi in 1979.
[50] Since then the club has been sponsored by
Crown Paints,
Candy,
Carlsberg and
Standard Chartered Bank. The contract with Carlsberg, which was signed in 1992, was the longest-lasting agreement in English top-flight football.
[51]
The association with Carlsberg ended at the start of the 2010–11
season, when Standard Chartered Bank became the club's sponsor.
[52]
The Liverpool badge is based on the city's liver bird, which in the
past had been placed inside a shield. In 1992, to commemorate the
centennial of the club, a new badge was commissioned, including a
representation of the
Shankly Gates. The next year twin flames were added at either side are symbolic of the Hillsborough memorial outside Anfield, where an
eternal flame burns in memory of those who died in the Hillsborough disaster.
[53]
In 2012, Warrior Sports' first Liverpool kit removed the shield and
gates, returning the badge to what had adorned Liverpool shirts in the
1970s; the flames were moved to the back collar of the shirt,
surrounding the number 96 for number who died at Hillsborough.
[54]
Stadium
Anfield was built in 1884 on land adjacent to
Stanley Park.
It was originally used by Everton before the club moved to Goodison
Park after a dispute over rent with Anfield owner John Houlding.
Left with an empty ground, Houlding founded Liverpool in 1892 and the
club has played at Anfield ever since. The capacity of the stadium at
the time was 20,000, although only 100 spectators attended Liverpool's
first match at Anfield.
In 1906 the banked stand at one end of the ground was formally renamed the
Spion Kop after a hill in KwaZulu-Natal. The hill was the site of the
Battle of Spion Kop in the
Second Boer War, where over 300 men of the Lancashire Regiment died, many of them from Liverpool.
At its peak, the stand could hold 28,000 spectators and was one of the
largest single-tier stands in the world. Many stadia in England had
stands named after Spion Kop, but Anfield's was the largest of them at
the time; it could hold more supporters than some entire football
grounds.
[59]
Anfield could accommodate more than 60,000 supporters at its peak,
and had a capacity of 55,000 until the 1990s. The Taylor Report and
Premier League regulations obliged Liverpool to convert Anfield to an
all-seater stadium in time for the 1993–94 season, reducing the capacity
to 45,276.
[60] The findings of the
Taylor Report
precipitated the redevelopment of the Kemlyn Road Stand, which was
rebuilt in 1992, coinciding with the centenary of the club, and is now
known as the Centenary Stand. An extra tier was added to the Anfield
Road end in 1998, which further increased the capacity of the ground but
gave rise to problems when it was opened. A series of support poles and
stanchions were inserted to give extra stability to the top tier of the
stand after movement of the tier was reported at the start of the
1999–2000 season.
[61]
Because of restrictions on expanding the capacity at Anfield, Liverpool announced plans to move to the proposed
Stanley Park Stadium in May 2002.
[62] Planning permission was granted in July 2004,
[63] and in September 2006, Liverpool City Council agreed to grant Liverpool a
999-year lease on the proposed site.
[64]
Following the takeover of the club by George Gillett and Tom Hicks in
February 2007, the proposed stadium was redesigned. The new design was
approved by the Council in November 2007. The stadium was scheduled to
open in August 2011 and would hold 60,000 spectators, with
HKS, Inc. contracted to build the stadium.
[65]
Construction was halted in August 2008, as Gillett and Hicks had
difficulty in financing the £300 million needed for the development.
[66]
In October 2012, BBC Sport reported that Fenway Sports Group, the new
owners of Liverpool FC, had decided to redevelop their current home at
Anfield stadium, rather than building a new stadium in Stanley Park. As
part of the redevelopment the capacity of Anfield was to increase from
45,276 to approximately 60,000 and would cost in the region of £150m.
[67]
Support
Liverpool is one of the best supported clubs in Europe.
[68]
The club states that its worldwide fan base includes more than
200 officially recognised Club of the LFC Official Supporters Clubs in
at least 50 countries. Notable groups include
Spirit of Shankly and
Reclaim The Kop.
[69] The club takes advantage of this support through its worldwide summer tours.
[70] Liverpool fans often refer to themselves as
Kopites, a reference to the fans who once stood, and now sit, on the Kop at Anfield.
[71] In 2008 a group of fans decided to form a splinter club,
A.F.C. Liverpool, to play matches for fans who had been priced out of watching Premier League football.
[72]
The song "
You'll Never Walk Alone", originally from the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical
Carousel and later recorded by Liverpool musicians
Gerry & The Pacemakers,
is the club's anthem and has been sung by the Anfield crowd since the
early 1960s. It has since gained popularity among fans of other clubs
around the world.
[73]
The song's title adorns the top of the Shankly Gates, which were
unveiled on 2 August 1982 in memory of former manager Bill Shankly. The
"You'll Never Walk Alone" portion of the Shankly Gates is also
reproduced on the club's crest.
The Shankly Gates, erected in honour of former manager
Bill Shankly
The club's supporters have been involved in two stadium disasters.
The first was the 1985 Heysel Stadium disaster, in which 39 Juventus
supporters were killed. They were confined to a corner by Liverpool fans
who had charged in their direction; the weight of the cornered fans
caused a wall to collapse.
UEFA laid the blame for the incident solely on the Liverpool supporters,
[74]
and banned all English clubs from European competition for five years.
Liverpool was banned for an additional year, preventing it from
participating in the 1990–91 European Cup, even though it won the League
in 1990.
[75] Twenty-seven fans were arrested on suspicion of manslaughter and were extradited to Belgium in 1987 to face trial.
[76] In 1989, after a five-month trial in Belgium, 14 Liverpool fans were given three-year sentences for involuntary manslaughter;
[77] half of the terms were suspended.
[78]
The second disaster took place during an FA Cup semi-final between
Liverpool and Nottingham Forest at Hillsborough Stadium, Sheffield, on
15 April 1989. Ninety-six Liverpool fans died as a consequence of
overcrowding at the Leppings Lane end, in what became known as the
Hillsborough disaster. In the following days
The Sun
newspaper published an article entitled "The Truth", in which it
claimed that Liverpool fans had robbed the dead and had urinated on and
attacked the police.
[79]
Subsequent investigations proved the allegations false, leading to a
boycott of the newspaper by Liverpool fans across the city and
elsewhere; many still refuse to buy
The Sun more than 20 years later.
[80]
Many support organisations were set up in the wake of the disaster,
such as the Hillsborough Justice Campaign, which represents bereaved
families, survivors and supporters in their efforts to secure justice.
[81]
Rivalries
Liverpool's longest-established rivalry is with fellow Merseyside team Everton, against whom the club contest the
Merseyside derby.
Their rivalry stems from Liverpool's formation and the dispute with
Everton officials and the then owners of Anfield. Unlike other
rivalries, there is no political, geographical or religious split
between Liverpool and Everton.
[82]
The Merseyside derby is usually sold out. It is one of the few local
derbies which do not enforce fan segregation, and hence was known as the
"friendly derby".
[83]
Since the mid-1980s, the rivalry has intensified both on and off the
field and, since the inception of the Premier League in 1992, the
Merseyside derby has had more players
sent off
than any other Premier League game. It has been referred to as "the
most ill-disciplined and explosive fixture in the Premier League".
[84]
Liverpool's
rivalry with Manchester United is viewed as a manifestation of the cities' competition during the
Industrial Revolution of the 19th century.
[85] The two clubs alternated as champions between
1964 and
1967,
[86] and Manchester United became the first English team to win the European Cup in
1968, followed by Liverpool's four European Cup victories.
[87] Despite the 38 league titles and eight European Cups between them
[86]
the two rivals have rarely been successful at the same time –
Liverpool's run of titles in the 1970s and '80s coincided with
Manchester United's 26-year title drought, and United's success in the
Premier League-era has likewise coincided with Liverpool's ongoing drought,
[88] and the two clubs have finished first and second in the league only five times.
[86] Nonetheless, former Manchester United manager
Alex Ferguson said in 2002, "My greatest challenge was knocking Liverpool right off their fucking perch",
[89] and the last player to be transferred between the two clubs was
Phil Chisnall, who moved to Liverpool from Manchester United in 1964.
[90]
Ownership and finances
As the owner of Anfield and founder of Liverpool, John Houlding was
the club's first chairman, a position he held from its founding in 1892
until 1904.
John McKenna took over as chairman after Houlding's departure. McKenna subsequently became President of the Football League.
The chairmanship changed hands many times before John Smith, whose
father was a shareholder of the club, took up the role in 1973. He
oversaw the most successful period in Liverpool's history before
stepping down in 1990. His successor was
Noel White who became Chairman in 1990 In August 1991
David Moores, whose family had owned the club for more than 50 years became Chairman. His uncle
John Moores
was also a shareholder at Liverpool and was chairman of Everton from
1961 to 1973. Moores owned 51 percent of the club, and in 2004 expressed
his willingness to consider a bid for his shares in Liverpool.
[95]
Moores eventually sold the club to American businessmen George
Gillett and Tom Hicks on 6 February 2007. The deal valued the club and
its outstanding debts at £218.9 million. The pair paid £5,000 per share,
or £174.1m for the total shareholding and £44.8m to cover the club's
debts.
[96] Disagreements between Gillett and Hicks, and the fans' lack of support for them, resulted in the pair looking to sell the club.
[97] Martin Broughton was appointed chairman of the club on 16 April 2010 to oversee its sale.
[98]
In May 2010, accounts were released showing the holding company of the
club to be £350m in debt (due to leveraged takeover) with losses of
£55m, causing auditor
KPMG to qualify its audit opinion.
[99] The group's creditors, including the
Royal Bank of Scotland,
took Gillett and Hicks to court to force them to allow the board to
proceed with the sale of the club, the major asset of the holding
company. A High Court judge,
Mr Justice Floyd,
ruled in favour of the creditors and paved the way for the sale of the
club to Fenway Sports Group (formerly New England Sports Ventures),
although Gillett and Hicks still had the option to appeal.
[100] Liverpool was sold to Fenway Sports Group on 15 October 2010 for £300m.
[101]
Liverpool has been described as a global brand; a 2010 report valued
the club's trademarks and associated intellectual property at £141m, an
increase of £5m on the previous year. Liverpool was given a brand rating
of AA (Very Strong).
[102] In April 2010 business magazine
Forbes ranked Liverpool as the sixth most valuable football team in the world, behind Manchester United,
Real Madrid, Arsenal,
Barcelona and
Bayern Munich; they valued the club at $822m (£532m), excluding debt.
[103] Accountants
Deloitte ranked Liverpool eighth in the
Deloitte Football Money League, which ranks the world's football clubs in terms of revenue. Liverpool's income in the 2009–10 season was €225.3m.
[104]
Liverpool in popular culture
Because of its successful history, Liverpool is often featured when
football is depicted in British culture and has appeared in a number of
media firsts. The club appeared in the first edition of the BBC's
Match of the Day,
which screened highlights of its match against Arsenal at Anfield on 22
August 1964. The first football match to be televised in colour was
between Liverpool and West Ham United, broadcast live in March 1967. Liverpool fans featured in the
Pink Floyd song "
Fearless", in which they sang excerpts from "You'll Never Walk Alone".
[106] To mark the club's appearance in the 1988 FA Cup Final, Liverpool released a song known as the "
Anfield Rap", featuring
John Barnes and other members of the squad.
[107]
A documentary drama on the Hillsborough disaster, written by
Jimmy McGovern, was screened in 1996. It featured
Christopher Eccleston
as Trevor Hicks, whose story is the focus of the script. Hicks, who
lost two teenage daughters in the disaster, went on to campaign for
safer stadiums and helped to form the Hillsborough Families Support
Group.
[108] Liverpool featured in the film
The 51st State (also known as
Formula 51), in which ex-hitman Felix DeSouza (
Robert Carlyle) is a keen supporter of the team and the last scene takes place at a match between Liverpool and Manchester United.
[109] The club was featured in a children's television show called
Scully;
the plot revolved around a young boy, Francis Scully, who tried to gain
a trial match with Liverpool. The show featured prominent Liverpool
players of the time such as Kenny Dalglish.
[110]
Players
First-team squad
- As of 11 January 2015.[111]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Out on loan
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Reserves and Academy
Former players
Player records
Club captains
Since the establishment of the club in 1892, 45 players have been club captain of Liverpool F.C.
[121] Andrew Hannah became the first captain of the club after Liverpool separated from
Everton
and formed its own club. Initially Alex Raisbeck, who was club captain
from 1899 to 1909, was the longest serving captain before being
overtaken by Steven Gerrard who served 12 seasons as Liverpool captain
starting from the 2003–04 season.
[121] The present captain is Jordan Henderson, who replaced Gerrard in the 2015–16 season following Gerrard's move to LA Galaxy.
[122][123]
Player of the Season
Club officials
- Liverpool Football Club and Athletic Grounds Limited[138]
- Principal owner: John W. Henry
- Chairman: Tom Werner
- Vice-chairman: David Ginsberg
- Chief executive officer: Ian Ayre
- Chief commercial officer: Billy Hogan[139]
- Chief financial officer: Philip Nash
- Liverpool Football Club
- Directors: John W. Henry, Tom Werner, David Ginsberg, Ian Ayre, Michael Gordon, Michael Egan
- Operations director: Andrew Parkinson[140]
- Head groundsman: Terry Forsyth
- Stadium manager: Ged Poynton
- Director of communications: Susan Black[141]
- Chief media officer: Matthew Baxter[142]
- Director of scouting: Dave Fallows[143]
- Chief scout: Barry Hunter
- Director of technical performance: Michael Edwards
|
- Coaching and medical staff[111]
- Manager: Jürgen Klopp
- First assistant coach: Željko Buvač
- Second assistant coach: Peter Krawietz
- Head of fitness and conditioning: Ryland Morgans
- First-team goalkeeping coach: John Achterberg
- First-team development coach: Pepijn Lijnders
- Head of physiotherapy: Chris Morgan
- Rehab fitness coach: Jordan Milsom
- Masseurs: Paul Small, Sylvan Richardson
- Kit management co-ordinators: Lee Radcliffe, Graham Carter
- Sports science consultant: Barry Drust
- Consultant nutritionist: James Morton
- Strength & rehabilitation assistant: David Rydings
- Physiotherapists: Matt Konopinski, Ruben Pons, Scott McAuley
- Sports therapist: Pedro Philippou
- Performance analyst: James French
- Scouting and recruitment analyst: Kyle Wallbanks
|
Honours
Replicas of the four
European Cups Liverpool won from 1977 to 1984 on display in the club's museum
Liverpool's first trophy was the Lancashire League, which it won in the club's first season.
In 1901, the club won its first League title, while its first success
in the FA Cup was in 1965. In terms of the number of trophies won,
Liverpool's most successful decade was the 1980s, when the club won six
League titles, two FA Cups, four League Cups, five
Charity Shields
(one shared) and two European Cups. Liverpool has won the English
League Championship eighteen times, the FA Cup seven times and the
League Cup a record eight times. The club achieved a League and FA Cup
"double" in 1986 and won the League and European Cup double both in 1977
and in 1984. Liverpool also won the League Cup in 1984 to complete a
treble, a feat repeated (albeit with different trophies) in 2001, when the club won the FA Cup, League Cup and
UEFA Cup.
[145]
The club has accumulated more top-flight wins and points than any other English team.
[146] Liverpool also has the highest average league finishing position (3,3) for the 50-year period to 2015
[147]
and second-highest average league finishing position for the period
1900–1999 after Arsenal, with an average league placing of 8.7.
[148]
Liverpool has won the European Cup, Europe's premier club competition,
five times, an English record and only surpassed by Real Madrid and A.C.
Milan. Liverpool's fifth European Cup win, in 2005, meant that the club
was
awarded the trophy permanently and was also awarded a
multiple-winner badge.
[149][150] Liverpool has won the UEFA Cup, Europe's secondary club competition, three times.
[151]
Domestic
League
- First Division: 18
- 1900–01, 1905–06, 1921–22, 1922–23, 1946–47, 1963–64, 1965–66, 1972–73, 1975–76, 1976–77, 1978–79, 1979–80, 1981–82, 1982–83, 1983–84, 1985–86, 1987–88, 1989–90
- Second Division: 4
- Lancashire League: 1
Cups
- FA Cup: 7
- League Cup: 8
- FA Charity / Community Shield: 15
- 1964*, 1965*, 1966, 1974*, 1976, 1977*, 1979, 1980, 1982, 1986*, 1988, 1989, 1990*, 2001, 2006 (* shared)
- Super Cup: 1
European
Doubles and trebles
Especially short competitions, such as the
FA Community Shield and the
UEFA Super Cup, are not generally considered to contribute towards a Double or Treble.
[152]
Notes
Footnotes
- Doubles
won in conjunction with the treble, such as a FA Cup and League Cup
double in 2001, are not included in the Doubles section.
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References
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External links
- Independent sites
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