Johan Cruyff (Dutch football legend): "There's not one club in Europe with an anthem like You'll Never Walk Alone. There's not one club in the world so united with the fans. I sat there watching the Liverpool fans and they sent shivers down my spine. A mass of 40,000 people became one force behind their team. That's something not many teams have. For that I admire Liverpool more than anything."
Jerzy Dudek: "We had studied the Milan penalty takers on video and knew which way they kicked the ball but when it came to it, I dived the other way to the way I'd been instructed. Carra came up to me after extra time and said 'Remember Grobbelaar and the rubbery legs of 84 - and do the same. Dance, do anything, put them off'."
Diego Maradona: "The English club proved that miracles really do exist. I've now made Liverpool my English team. They showed that football is the most beautiful sport of all. You knew they could defend but the team showed they could play too and wrote a page in the history books. The match will last forever. The Liverpool supporters didn't let me go to sleep the night before. There were 10 of them to every three Milan supporters. They showed their unconditional support at half-time when they were losing 3-0 and still they didn't stop singing."
Rafael Benitez: "This was without doubt my biggest night in football. I was so proud of my players."
Ray Clemence is without doubt the greatest goalkeeper ever to play for Liverpool.
Not only that, he was arguably the finest stopper in Europe throughout the 1970s and early 1980s, a period in which Liverpool won five league titles and three European Cups.
In his vivid green goalkeeping top, Clemence became an Anfield institution and will go down as one of the shrewdest transfer bargains in football history.
Signed from Scunthorpe for £18,000 during the summer of 1967, he served his Kop apprenticeship in the Central League before replacing Tommy Lawrence on a permanent basis during the 1969-70 campaign.
An unflappable and reassuring presence between the sticks right from the off, Clem inspired confidence in those around him.
Within two years he was pulling on an England jersey, though his international career would be spent embroiled in a long-running battle with Peter Shilton.
Meanwhile, life as Liverpool's last line of defence became a lonely existence. While his teammates laid siege to the opposition goal, he was often required to make just one or two saves per game. Luckily, as well as lightning-quick reactions, one of the stopper's most valuable assets was his concentration.
The successful UEFA Cup campaigns of 1972-73 and 1975-76 provided two notable examples of Clemence at his best, as he denied both Borussia Moenchengladbach and Dynamo Dresden with exceptional penalty saves.
Many a First Division forward also saw their goalscoring hopes flounder in the face of Liverpool's ace custodian, while his crucial stop from Uli Stielike in Rome '77 proved to be the turning point of a momentous first European Cup final.
With Clem in goal, errors were rarer than a Reds defeat, clean sheets became a common occurrence and defensive records tumbled.
Having helped Paisley conquer Europe, he was in no small way responsible for taking the side's domestic domination to unprecedented heights in 1978-79, conceding a mere 16 goals during a 42-match league programme.
Little did the Kop know that Clemence's time on Merseyside was coming to an end. It was on the eve of the 1981-82 season that the Skegness-born shot-stopper announced he was leaving for Tottenham.
His last act in a Liverpool shirt was to shut-out the Real Madrid attack in Paris as a third European Cup triumph was secured – a fitting end to an Anfield career of such distinction.
During his 11 years in the first team he missed just six league matches, won every major honour in the game apart from the European Cup Winners' Cup and displayed a level of consistency that no Reds' keeper has since been able to match.
Kevin Keegan was quite simply THE footballing superstar of the Seventies.
With his famous 'bubble' perm, the Yorkshire-born striker was an icon both for Liverpool and England.
The attention which came his way wasn't without merit, for Keegan was a dynamic attacking force who can take much of the credit for the trophies which arrived at Anfield between 1971 and 1977.
Two UEFA Cups, three league titles, a European and FA Cup and a tally of 100 goals: the number seven left the Kop with a multitude of magical memories.
'Robbery with violence' was how Bill Shankly described the capture of Keegan from Scunthorpe for a measly £35,000.
Although he'd been signed with a view to replacing Ian Callaghan in midfield, the confident new recruit immediately impressed in an attacking role during pre-season. So much so that he was handed a surprise debut at home to Nottingham Forest on the opening day, an occasion he marked with a goal after just 12 minutes.
Revelling in his new-found fame, KK didn't look back, forming an almost telepathic partnership with John Toshack that would become one of the deadliest in the game.
Energetic, enthusiastic and 100 per cent committed to the Kop cause, Keegan was a born winner who provided Shankly's second great side with the spark that ignited a renewed assault on the major honours.
His first season at the club may have ended trophyless but the foundations had been laid and in 1972-73 the forward fired Liverpool to an unprecedented domestic and European double. He topped the Anfield goalscoring charts in the process and netted what proved to be a crucial brace in the UEFA Cup final first leg against Borussia Moenchengladbach.
Another two-goal Keegan blast clinched FA Cup success the following year as Newcastle, a club he'd go on to play for and manage, were overwhelmed at Wembley. The effervescent attacker had already struck four times en route to the twin towers, including a perfectly lobbed effort over Leicester's Peter Shilton in the semi-final replay at Villa Park.
Fast, skilful and courageous, he was a handful for opposition defenders and was by now widely regarded as one of the finest forwards in the land. Despite standing at just 5ft 8ins tall, he was surprisingly adept in aerial combat and, as Leeds skipper Billy Bremner discovered to his cost, could also pack a punch.
Sent off for trading blows with Bremner in the 1974 Charity Shield, the first to be held at Wembley, Keegan caused further outrage by stripping off his shirt as he left the field. He was later slapped with an 11-game ban but emerged from this controversy more determined than ever.
The 1975-76 campaign was to be his finest as a Liverpool player, with his all round play and crucial goals – notably away to Wolves and Bruges - proving instrumental in yet another league and UEFA Cup double.
Keegan's efforts were rewarded with the Footballer of the Year accolade, and he still found time to fall off his bike on TV show Superstars and splash Brut 'all over' with boxing legend Henry Cooper.
But, with the recently appointed England skipper's stock rising on and off the pitch, speculation mounted that several clubs from abroad were circling.
On the eve of the 1976-77 season, every Liverpudlian's worst nightmare was confirmed when Keegan served notice of his intention to quit the club and join Bundesliga outfit Hamburg in twelve months' time.
His decision was understandably met with disdain from certain sections of the Kop and his once soaring popularity dipped significantly, with some fans questioning his loyalty.
Credit where credit's due, though: he knuckled down and got on with the job of aiding Liverpool's 13-year quest for European Cup glory. It may not have been a vintage campaign personally but it was to end on the ultimate high in Rome.
Four days after being made the scapegoat by some for the FA Cup final defeat by Manchester United, which had scuppered dreams of the treble, Keegan won back the everlasting affection of the supporters with a dazzling performance against Borussia Moenchengladbach.
On a balmy night in the Olympic Stadium his tireless work-rate and close control bamboozled experienced German international Bertie Vogts to such an extent that he had no option but to bring him down for the penalty that sealed a momentous victory. There could have been no more fitting way for Liverpool's star of the Seventies to pull the curtain down on an illustrious career with the Reds.
Keegan may have gone on to be crowned European Footballer of the Year twice during his spell in Germany but it was at Anfield where he enjoyed his greatest success.
One of Liverpool Football Club's favourite sons, there'll always be a special place in the heart of the Kop for Kevin Keegan.
My latest comments
Jorgerj Hello, my 5 *****, my friendship and Liverpoooooooooooool!
the 30-08-2011 at 12:56
NRO Thank you same to u..YNWA and 5*****
the 30-08-2011 at 13:43
suehaime Hi Norman, not a nice day for all Liverpool fans. The worse thing about it is that the manager doesn't seem to know that he is the cause of all the problems! The players don't like his tactics and the fans most certainly don't either! YNWA!
the 30-12-2010 at 12:49
NRO True... although I also believe some of the players are not giving 100% ... and... I miss Rafa...
the 30-12-2010 at 12:55
suehaime Merry Christmas Norman and a Happy New Year! May next year bring us better results! YNWA!
the 25-12-2010 at 1:36
liverpool007 MERRY XMASS AND HAPPY NEW YEAR
the 23-12-2010 at 18:53
NRO Thank you... to you too... YNWA
the 23-12-2010 at 19:51
NRO Manu... Merry X-mas and a happy 2011 to you too!!!!
the 23-12-2010 at 16:58