No Liverpudlian old enough to remember will forget where they were the day Bill Shankly announced his retirement as Anfield boss. The bombshell reverberated through the football world and stunned Reds fans to the core.
On April 15th 1989, over 25,000 Liverpool supporters travelled down to Hillsborough for the FA Cup semi-final. Ninety six fans never returned. '100 Days That Shook The Kop' reaches its climax with a day no one will ever forget
No one will ever forget the tragic events of Heysel. Instead of leaving Brussels having seen our team lift a fifth European Cup, Liverpool supporters travelled home having witnessed the deaths of 38 Italians and one Belgian.
May 25 1977 is a date that will forever hold special significance for Liverpudlians. For it was on this balmy night in Rome that Emlyn Hughes proudly held aloft the gleaming silver trophy that is the European Cup for the first time.
For 73 years the FA Cup remained a notable absentee on Liverpool Football Club's roll of honour. That changed on the unforgettable afternoon of May 1 1965 when goals from Hunt and St John helped defeat Leeds 2-1.
The red half of Merseyside partied like never before the day Gerard Houllier's treble winning heroes returned home to parade their magnificent and unprecedented haul of silverware.
"It broke my heart to leave Liverpool," a clearly stunned and emotional Kenny Dalglish told a packed press conference at Anfield in 1991 to announce his resignation as Liverpool manager. A decision that stunned the football world
Liverpool beat Everton 3-1 at Wembley in the first all-Merseyside FA Cup Final and make history by clinching the coveted league and cup double.
Anfield was shaken to its foundations and a legend was born the night the French aristocrats of St Etienne came to town in March 1977.
April 30th 1994 marked the end of an era at Anfield as Liverpool entertained Norwich in the last ever game to be played in front of the standing Kop.
On December 1st 1959 Liverpool Football Club announced that Huddersfield boss Bill Shankly would be their new manager. Life at Anfield would never be the same again.
Recalling the night Liverpool recorded a famous 3-1 victory over the reigning world champions Inter Milan in 1965 European Cup semi-final 1st leg.
The 1988/89 title race boiled down to the most dramatic in history, but sadly it's one Liverpudlians would rather forget as a last gasp Michael Thomas goal at Anfield snatched the championship for Arsenal.
Liverpool's class of 2001 etched their indelibly into the history books, after they completed an unprecedented cup treble with an amazing 5-4 victory over Alaves in the UEFA Cup Final.
On a dramatic night in Rome Liverpool triumphed against all the odds to win a fourth European Cup courtesy of a nailbiting penalty shoo-out.
Liverpool clinched their first European trophy in May 1973 courtesy of a memorable two-legged victory over the highly-rated Borussia Monchengladbach.
They thought Kevin Keegan could never be replaced but how wrong they were! On August 10th 1977 Liverpool signed Kenny Dalglish as his replacement and the rest is history.
In one of the most dramatic climaxes to a FA Cup Final Michael Owen scored twice in six minutes to snatch the Cup for Liverpool on a never-to-be-forgotten day in Cardiff.
On November 6th 1982 Ian Rush wrote his name indelibly into Merseyside derby folklore with a phenomenal four goal blast as Liverpool emphatically defeated Everton 5-0 at Goodison.
On a dramatic night at Molineux in May 1976 Liverpool came from behind to defeat Wolves 3-1 and clinch the first league title of Bob Paisley's managerial reign.