Ticket counterfeiters...And fountain pushers, shoplifters, slabthrowers, turnstile jumpers…feel free to add
Ticket counterfeiters...And fountain pushers, shoplifters, slabthrowers, turnstile jumpers…feel free to add
hope you're not from Yorkshire :)I have been in the United Kingdom for a very long time, pushing now for 11 years, and have been in love with the PL and City since 2006-2007 ( First time I came to England ) due to my family and a very funny story which is for another time.
In my time here, there have rarely been people, and football fans to trigger me as much as Liverpool ones do. I don't even know what it is. I understood all my life, that the scum were at the top, they were arrogant, bla bla. But these entitled cunts, they are the epitome of shite combined with puss.
I have had many colleagues and friends who are supporters of this team, and it's just unbearable to discuss football with them. It always has been. Their logic is not connected to any reality, and they seem to work like a hive. Awful supporters, awful club.
Other than the last three games which Liverpool have won, Liverpool did have a bit of a mental block when it comes to playing United over the last decade.Just had a look on rawk & Liverpool are actually worried about playing Utd! Lol
I thought they were the worlds best team
Wtf
sick bags available upon request.........
There was slight apprehension within our group as we set off for Cologne. We were, after all, foreign football fans with no particular affiliation towards FC Koln.
But that apprehension evaporated swiftly when we explained we were, in one word, Liverpool.
The attention and respect that one word garners is both empowering and humbling in equal measure.
Within those nine letters comes over a hundred years of history. That word represents Liddell, Hughes, Dalglish, Rush, Hansen, Gerrard and Torres; it's synonymous with 18 league titles, five European Cups, Rome, Dortmund, Istanbul and decades of forging friendships through our behaviour abroad.
Nothing betters going away to watch your football team play renowned European teams with illustrious histories and traditions, safe in the knowledge those sides are just as eager to play our legendary club.
Friendships are made and anecdotes are formed to be retold through the generations - it's the essence of Liverpool Football Club and its supporters.
With our original Koln acquaintances now doubling as both a tour guide and ringmaster through the streets near the RhineEnergieStadion, word spread of our heritage.
An inundation of requests to sing You'll Never Walk Alone soon followed, as did the offer to pose for photographs - photographs that would no doubt decorate a pub similar to the one we sat it.
It was at that point I realised just what a special entity supporters of Liverpool Football Club are. It was at also at that point I realised what a special city we are.
I said in a previous column how the city and the club are an organic process. Neither would have the reputation it does without the other.
It's a football club which has always tried its best to stand by Shankly's beliefs of socialism; it's a city which has always strived to help each other.
That's why it was poetic Shankly stood with his arms outstretched on St George's Hall in 1971, and not on the steps of Anfield. He wasn't embracing Liverpool Football Club alone - the show of strength before him was that of a city.
It's the reason why we have Spirit of Shankly, a supporters' union named after the great man himself - a union which has always acted with the fans and the city at heart; a union which does a lot of work for the local community, and a lot of work for the city.
It's the reason why hundreds of thousands welcomed the football club home after Rome, Wembley, Paris and Istanbul, proud of what they'd achieved as a city and for their city.
It's the reason why most fans we meet reserve that special respect for us. Language barriers are torn down to share our stories of following the Reds home and abroad.
And it's also the reason why we told those Koln supporters that we were Scouse, not English.
With such a strong loyalty to both our football team and our city, it's difficult for me, and several other supporters I know, to conserve any energy for the national side.
Those on the outside will regard it as insular. For me, it's more about celebrating my city and my heritage. It's about celebrating my beliefs.
Supporting Liverpool is supporting a football club like no other. It's not just a job every Saturday or Sunday afternoon. Supporting Liverpool Football Club defines who you are as a football supporter and as a person. Every positive gesture will maintain our reputation or cause a rethink to those who have us wrong.
It's why we're proud of our club, our city and our people, because they all work together to preserve that reputation.


If rather see 1-1, to keep Alisson further away from the Golden Glove award.NIl fucking nil. No shots on target. No contentious decisions. No injuries, fuck all.
I hope everyone has switched off by half time out of sheer boredom.
Monday night ? Whose talking about Monday night ? I am talking about every game these self entitled shites play.
Sky viewers will be asked to vote who has the best anthem, Nick Nack Paddy Wack or the equally riveting YAWN.Bore draw with Sky telling everyone this is the sort of classic only these two teams are capable of
Birmingham and London also have huge Irish populations as well as Manchester. It’s a bizarre thing that Scousers seem to think they’re the only Irish city in England.They like to justify that one by talking about the amount of irish immigration over the years, however Manchester had far more Irish immigration than Liverpool ever had in fact it had and has far more because of the amount of work available, in comparison Liverpool had the docks and a few large factories
The point still remains though that the vast majority of their fan base is not from Liverpool or even Merseyside, but they just need to belong to something and be different, basically they are an insecure bunch of needy bell ends
The normal perfect weekend is us winning then relying on two other matches where the two cheeks are playing.
This weekend is different. Just need our win and it’s perfect from there really.
Burning their candles at both ends, by the looks of it.I see the Scouse Republic has been taken over by the UK Goverment due to the incompetence of their rulers and misuse of public funds.
NOT their FAULT though and they will soon regain control according to their phlegm spitting spokespersons.
Nope, why would i be.hope you're not from Yorkshire :)
Good point. Two absolute shite goals involving no skill.If rather see 1-1, to keep Alisson further away from the Golden Glove award.
just joking.Nope, why would i be.
Pass the sick bag...sick bags available upon request.........
There was slight apprehension within our group as we set off for Cologne. We were, after all, foreign football fans with no particular affiliation towards FC Koln.
But that apprehension evaporated swiftly when we explained we were, in one word, Liverpool.
The attention and respect that one word garners is both empowering and humbling in equal measure.
Within those nine letters comes over a hundred years of history. That word represents Liddell, Hughes, Dalglish, Rush, Hansen, Gerrard and Torres; it's synonymous with 18 league titles, five European Cups, Rome, Dortmund, Istanbul and decades of forging friendships through our behaviour abroad.
Nothing betters going away to watch your football team play renowned European teams with illustrious histories and traditions, safe in the knowledge those sides are just as eager to play our legendary club.
Friendships are made and anecdotes are formed to be retold through the generations - it's the essence of Liverpool Football Club and its supporters.
With our original Koln acquaintances now doubling as both a tour guide and ringmaster through the streets near the RhineEnergieStadion, word spread of our heritage.
An inundation of requests to sing You'll Never Walk Alone soon followed, as did the offer to pose for photographs - photographs that would no doubt decorate a pub similar to the one we sat it.
It was at that point I realised just what a special entity supporters of Liverpool Football Club are. It was at also at that point I realised what a special city we are.
I said in a previous column how the city and the club are an organic process. Neither would have the reputation it does without the other.
It's a football club which has always tried its best to stand by Shankly's beliefs of socialism; it's a city which has always strived to help each other.
That's why it was poetic Shankly stood with his arms outstretched on St George's Hall in 1971, and not on the steps of Anfield. He wasn't embracing Liverpool Football Club alone - the show of strength before him was that of a city.
It's the reason why we have Spirit of Shankly, a supporters' union named after the great man himself - a union which has always acted with the fans and the city at heart; a union which does a lot of work for the local community, and a lot of work for the city.
It's the reason why hundreds of thousands welcomed the football club home after Rome, Wembley, Paris and Istanbul, proud of what they'd achieved as a city and for their city.
It's the reason why most fans we meet reserve that special respect for us. Language barriers are torn down to share our stories of following the Reds home and abroad.
And it's also the reason why we told those Koln supporters that we were Scouse, not English.
With such a strong loyalty to both our football team and our city, it's difficult for me, and several other supporters I know, to conserve any energy for the national side.
Those on the outside will regard it as insular. For me, it's more about celebrating my city and my heritage. It's about celebrating my beliefs.
Supporting Liverpool is supporting a football club like no other. It's not just a job every Saturday or Sunday afternoon. Supporting Liverpool Football Club defines who you are as a football supporter and as a person. Every positive gesture will maintain our reputation or cause a rethink to those who have us wrong.
It's why we're proud of our club, our city and our people, because they all work together to preserve that reputation.
Don't worry the in house Witch will be grinding them up to make another bad luck potion.I blame the Beatles.
They came to Liverpool because of the potato blight to get on a ship to the USA.Birmingham and London also have huge Irish populations as well as Manchester. It’s a bizarre thing that Scousers seem to think they’re the only Irish city in England.
Manchester is about 35% Irish
Birmingham about the same
and London probably has as many people with Irish ancestry as Liverpool Manchester and Birmingham combined.
They came to Liverpool because of the potato blight to get on a ship to the USA.