Liverpool Football Club is an English professional football club from  Liverpool, England,  and plays in the Premier League. Liverpool has  played at Anfield since  the club's foundation in 1892 and was admitted  to the Football League a  year later. England's most successful club of  the 20th century and one  of the most successful clubs in the history of  English football,  Liverpool has won a joint-record 18 league titles,  seven FA Cups and a  record seven League Cups. Liverpool is also the most  successful English  club in European competition having won five  European Cups, the last  in 2005, and three UEFA Cups. 
The  club currently  rank third in Europe and sixth in the world with the  most international  titles won. The club's supporters have been involved  in two major  tragedies. The first was the Heysel Stadium disaster in  1985, where  charging Liverpool fans caused a wall to collapse,  resulting in the  death of 39 Juventus supporters. In the 1989  Hillsborough Disaster, 96  Liverpool supporters lost their lives in a  crush against perimeter  fencing. Liverpool has long-standing rivalries  with neighbours Everton  and with Manchester United. The team's home  colours have been entirely  red since 1964 when manager Bill Shankly  changed them from a red shirt  and white shorts. 
The  club's anthem is "You'll Never Walk Alone".  Liverpool F.C. was founded  following a dispute between the Everton F.C.  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.  Originally named  Everton F.C. and Athletic Grounds Ltd (Everton Athletic  for short), the  club became Liverpool F.C. in June 1892 after The  Football Association  refused to recognise the club as Everton. In its  debut season, the  team won the Lancashire League, before joining the  Football League  Second Division at the start of the 1893–94 season. 
After  finishing in first place, the club was promoted to First Division,   which it won in 1901, and again in 1906. Liverpool won back-to-back   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. After losing 1–0 to Burnley F.C. in the club's first FA Cup   final in 1914, Liverpool was defeated in the final for a second time in   1950 by Arsenal. The club was relegated to the Second Division in the   1953–54 season.
The  famous liver bird first took its perch on the left-hand side of the   chest in the 1950 FA Cup Final defeat to Arsenal and is a symbol that   has continued to signify the prestige involved with playing for   Liverpool FC. The crest was revived for the 1955-56 season, and was   appearing out of a white oval with L.F.C. embroided below the liver   bird. This version was used until 1969. In 1968 the decision was taken   to introduce a more modern version of the club crest. The liver bird was   now embroidered directly onto the team's shirts with the removal of  the  white oval and shields. For seven years this was used in white but  from  1976 the emblem was changed to gold and reverting back to white  when  the club dropped Umbro as their kit supplier and signed a contract  with  Adidas in 1985. 
In  1992 the club adopted a new crest to celebrate their  centenary. The  familiar liver bird remained as the centrepiece but now  appeared  against a red and white shield. Above the shield is a  representation of  the Shankly Gates with the title of club's famous  anthem, "You'll  Never Walk Alone". The twin flames at either side are  symbolic of the  Hillsborough memorial outside Anfield, where an eternal  flame burns in  memory of those who died in the disaster. Since 1992 the  crest has only  undergone some minor changes until it was updated in  1999. The present  crest has been relatively unchanged since then when it  first appeared  on the shirt in just two colours but after 2002 it  appeared in full  colour. Liverpool's first competitive game was an 8–0  victory in the  Lancashire League against Higher Walton.
Ian  Callaghan  holds Liverpool's overall appearance record—he played 857  matches over  the course of 19 seasons from 1958 to 1978- and the record  for League  appearances with 640. Of the current squad, Jamie Carragher  has the most  appearances; he played his 600th game for the club early  in 2010.  Liverpool's all-time leading scorer in all competitions is Ian  Rush, who  scored 346 goals in two spells at the club from 1980 to 1987  and 1988  to 1996, and also holds the record for the most goals in a  season with  47 in 1983–84. However Rush could not surpass Roger Hunt's  record number  of league goals of 245. In the 1961–62 season, Hunt  scored 41 goals,  which is the club record for league goals in a single  season. 
Gordon   Hodgson, the club's third highest scorer with 240 goals, holds the  club  record of 17 hat tricks. The most goals scored by a player in a  single  match is five; John Miller, Andy McGuigan, John Evans, Ian Rush  and  Robbie Fowler have achieved this feat. Fowler also holds the club  and  Premier League record for the fastest hat trick: he scored three  goals  in four minutes, 32 seconds against Arsenal in the 1994–95  season.  Steven Gerrard is Liverpool's all-time leading goalscorer in  European  competition with 34 goals. Liverpool's record home attendance  is 61,905,  for a FA Cup match against Wolves on 2 February 1952. The  record modern  (all-seated) attendance is 44,983 for a match against  Tottenham Hotspur  on 14 January 2006. 
The  club's record lowest attendance is 1,000 for a  match against  Loughborough during the 1895–96 season. Liverpool's  biggest victory is  11–0 against Strømsgodset IF in 1974. Liverpool's  10–1 defeat of  Rotherham Town in 1896 was the club's largest league win.  This margin  of victory was matched when Crystal Palace was defeated 9–0  at Anfield  in 1989. Liverpool's heaviest defeat, 1–9, came against  Birmingham City  in 1954. Liverpool's 8–0 win against Beşiktaş J.K. in  the Champions  League was the largest victory in the competition's  history at the time  (November 2007).
Anfield  was built in 1884 on land adjacent to Stanley Park, the ground  was  originally used by Everton before they moved to Goodison Park after a   dispute over a rent with the owner of the ground John Houlding. Left   with an empty ground Houlding founded Liverpool in 1892 and the club   have played at Anfield since then. 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 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 whom were 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 the Spion Kop, but Anfield's was the  largest Kop in  the country at the time; it was able to hold more  supporters than some  entire football grounds. Anfield could hold over  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, thus  reducing the capacity to 45,276. The findings of  the Taylor Report  precipitated the redevelopment of the Kemlyn Road  Stand. The stand 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 increased  the capacity of  the ground further, though the stand encountered  problems upon opening. 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.  Due to the restrictions  of expanding the capacity at Anfield,  Liverpool announced plans to move a  new stadium at Stanley Park in May  2002. Planning permission was  granted in July 2004, and in September  2006, Liverpool City Council  agreed to grant Liverpool a 999-year lease  of the land on the proposed  site. 
Following  the takeover of the club in February 2007 by George  Gillett and Tom  Hicks, the proposed stadium was redesigned. In November  2007, the new  design was approved by the Council, and preparation of the  site started  in June 2008, with HKS, Inc. contracted to build the  stadium.  Construction of the stadium was halted in May 2008, as Gillett  and  Hicks had trouble financing the £300 million needed for the   development. New England Sports Ventures, who purchased the club on 15   October 2010, are evaluating the possibility of drastically refurbishing   Anfield against building a new stadium.
During  the 2009–10 season, Liverpool had the fourth-highest average  League  attendance for an English club: 44,392, which is 94.4% of  available  capacity. Liverpool fans often refer to themselves as  "Kopites", which  is a reference to the fans who once stood, and now sit,  on the Kop at  Anfield. In 2008, a group of fans decided to form a  splinter club,  A.F.C. Liverpool, the club was set up to provide a  match-going  experience for fans who had been priced out of watching  Premier League  football. 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. The  song's title adorns the top of the Shankly Gates, which were  unveiled on  2 August 1982 in memory of the former manager Bill  Shankly. The "You'll  Never Walk Alone" portion of the Shankly Gates is  also reproduced on  the club's crest. The club's supporters have been  involved in two  stadium disasters. The first was the 1985 Heysel  Stadium disaster, in  which 39 Juventus fans were killed. They were  penned into a corner by  Liverpool fans who had charged in their  direction; the sheer number of  fans cornered caused a wall to collapse.  UEFA laid the blame for the  incident solely on the fans of Liverpool,  and banned all English clubs  from European competition for five years.  27 fans were arrested on  suspicion of manslaughter, they were  extradited to Belgium to face trial  in 1987. In 1989, after a 5-month  trial in Belgium, fourteen Liverpool  fans were given three year  sentences for involuntary manslaughter,  although half of the terms were  suspended. 
The  second was during an FA  Cup semi-final between Liverpool and  Nottingham Forest at Hillsborough  Stadium, Sheffield on 15 April 1989.  96 Liverpool fans died due to  overcrowding in the Leppings Lane End, in  what became known as the  Hillsborough disaster. The Sun newspaper  published an article entitled  "The Truth", in which it claimed that  Liverpool fans had robbed and  urinated on the dead and had attacked the  police. Subsequent  investigations proved the allegations to be false,  and this led to a  city-wide boycott of the newspaper. Many  organisations were set up as a  result of the disaster, such as the  Hillsborough Justice Campaign, which  represents bereaved families,  survivors and supporters in their efforts  to secure justice.  Liverpool's longest-established rivalry is with  fellow Merseyside team  Everton, against whom the club contest the  Merseyside derby.
This  stems from Liverpool's formation and the dispute  with Everton  officials and the then owners of Anfield. Religious  differences have  been cited as a cause of division, although both teams  stem from a  Methodist origin, which undermines the notion of a  Catholic–Protestant  split. The Merseyside derby is usually a sell-out  fixture. It is one of  the few local derbies that does not enforce fan  segregation, as a  result it was known as the "friendly derby". Since the  mid 1980s, the  rivalry has intensified 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, thus has  been  referred to as "The most ill-disciplined and explosive fixture in  the  Premier League". 
Liverpool  has a rivalry with Manchester United. The  rivalry is viewed as a  manifestation of the cities' competition during  industrial times, when  they competed for supremacy of the north-west;  Liverpool was considered  the world's pre-eminent port, while Manchester  was famous for its  textile industry. The rivalry between the clubs  intensified from the  1960s onwards. In 1968, Manchester United became  the first English team  to win the European Cup, their achievement would  soon be eclipsed by  Liverpool who won four European Cups during the  1970s and 80s. Then in  the 1990s Manchester United started to dominate  English football making  the rivalry all the more intense. The rivalry is  so intense that the  last player to be transferred between the two clubs  was Phil Chisnall  in 1964, when he moved to Liverpool from Manchester  United.  
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