Winning eighteen league championships, four European Cups, a Champions
League tle, seven FA Cups and eight League Cups makes Liverpool Football
Club one of the most successful football club in England.
This is the football club touched by the greatest managers, the club,
indeed, where the cult of the manager began. Liverpool had been great
before but not for some me un l Billy Shankly arrived, ordaining it the
original People's Club because of the passion of its supporters.
Liverpool proceeded to dominate the European scene under Bob Paisley,
the quietly ruthless genius. Kenny Dalglish -- considered the club's
greatest player - later turned Liverpool into the country's most stylish
team when he took charge of the team.
Dalglish might stand in his own league but many other greats have
touched the famous This is Anfield sign wearing Liverpool red: from Ian
Callaghan, the club's record appearance holder, to Phil Neal, the club's
most decorated player, to Graeme Souness and Steven Gerrard, arguably
Liverpool's most iconic captains.
It was often thought the beauty of Liverpool's brilliance was the
simplicity behind it and yet, few rivals were able to crack the
Liverpool code.
As Liverpool enters its 125th year, Liverpool: An Oral History tells the
story of the club through the voices of the people who made the
institution one of the most revered in football.
Curated by Simon Hughes, and told in the words of the people who made it
the world institution it is, Liverpool: An Oral History o ers an
unparalleled insight into the club's story, featuring more than 100
interviews with the club's players, managers and fans.