Players of Liverpool pose for a photo as they celebrate the teams victory and confirmation of winning the Premier League title after the Premier League match between Liverpool FC and Tottenham Hotspur FC at Anfield on April 27, 2025 in Liverpool, England.
Liverpool's title-winning squad and backroom staff celebrate in front of The Kop(Image credit: Getty Images)

When Liverpool fans last celebrated the title at Anfield, it was regarded as a pretty run-of-the-mill occasion; after all, eight titles in 12 years can create a sense of expectation.

It felt as if that was something we achieved every single year, so I think we took it for granted, club statistician Ged Rea tells FourFourTwo.

"The best part of the campaign was always the final game of the season, or when the trophy was presented, we are the champions blasting away on the PA system, the players running around the outside of the pitch with the trophy.

'Trust me, weve dreamt about it often'

Such scenes are ones that Liverpool supporters who were too young or not born in 1990 have only been able to dream about for the past 35 years. And trust me, weve dreamt about it often.

Ive been fortunate enough to have witnessed Liverpool Football Club win every single trophy possible, from Cardiff to Qatar and London to Madrid. Ive also attended the final game of the season twice with the possibility of the title being won.

Of course, its an extremely privileged position to be in, having seen your team win every trophy possible and yet yearn for the one that you truly need in order to heal the wounds of near-misses of the past, of which there have been plenty.

Growing up in the nineties, every summer we were still tipped to win the league. And every May, we saw Man United take a step closer to achieving Alex Fergusons aim of knocking us off our perch.

Despite some half-title attempts, Liverpool never actually finished in the top two from 1991 to 2002.

Several players arrived as the fabled missing piece of the jigsaw before being put back in the box again.

Gerard Houlliers side followed up their 2001 Cup treble with the Reds then-best Premier League points total, but never kicked on from there.

It wasnt until Rafa Benitezs class of 2008/09 we endured a true title heartbreak, Federico Macheda haunting our dreams, finishing second despite just two defeats.

Eleven draws were what cost Benitezs side, which is arguably the best team not to win the Premier League, featuring a spine of Pepe Reina, Sami Hyypia, Jamie Carragher, Xabi Alonso, Javier Mascherano, Steven Gerrard and Fernando Torres.

Quite simply, that team should have won the league and we all knew it.

But the bigger they are, the harder they fall.

And the ride to what would have been an unexpected title in 2013/14 was like riding the Big One at Blackpool Pleasure Beach for the first time.

Brendan Rodgers Luis Suarez-inspired side had sat around fourth and fifth in the league up until March, when they put together a run of 11 league wins in a row, the 10th of which being the emotional 3-2 win over Man City that saw Steven Gerrards passionate this does not slip speech on the pitch post-match.

It was 25 years since Hillsborough and Gerrards last chance of the title. The stars were aligned. And then that moment happened against Chelsea and City went on to win the league by two points.

It seemed that everyone involved with Liverpool Football Club was shell-shocked - players, fans and staff - for at least the year that followed.

It haunted us then and if were honest it still haunts us to this day. Every away following singing their version of the Gerrard song served as a reminder of the disbelief at what had happened.

To this day I can't get my head around Gerrard, ranked at No.2 in FourFourTwo's list of the best Premier League midfielders of all time, not winning a Premier League title, nobody has deserved it more for the years he carried the club.

And then, it finally happened.

A record-breaking season, winning the title with the most games remaining, racking up the biggest ever lead at the top of the Premier League (25 points at one stage), 18 consecutive wins, 99 points.

We knew we would be champions from January.

The date of the parade was in the calendar months in advance.

Matt Ladson is the co-founder and editor of This Is Anfield, the independent Liverpool news and comment website, and covers all areas of the Reds for FourFourTwo including transfer analysis, interviews, title wins and European trophies. As well as writing about Liverpool for FourFourTwo he also contributes to other titles including Yahoo and Bleacher Report. He is a lifelong fan of the Reds.


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