Family · Football · Review

Our Liverpool Experience – Part One #LFC

If you read this post, you’ll know that last weekend we were invited by Liverpool Football Club to attend a match at Anfield, as well as taking in their new Family Fun zone, Stadium Tour and Museum. We’re all huge Liverpool fans, Husband having been a life-long supporter, and we were all so excited to have this opportunity.

Our trip started on Friday afternoon, as we decided to travel up early and stay in a nearby hotel before the match on Saturday. One EPIC 8 hour car journey later (it’s supposed to take 4-5 hours from where we live. M6 toll road of a Friday night? Awful!) and we finally arrived at our destination, tired and achey, but excited about the events ahead. We got our heads down at the hotel (review to follow later) and woke up bright and early the next day to travel to the stadium.

Shankly Gates
Shankly Gates

Although the game against West Brom didn’t start until 3pm, we arrived at the stadium for 10.30am to start the tour. We parked in the Stanley Park car park which was really well staffed and just a couple of minutes walk away from the stadium, so we didn’t have far to go. The day started for me when we got out of the car – Liverpool is an iconic city for more than one reason, a hive of political importance, and drinking in the sights on the way to the ground amplified my excitement. Β I’ve seen pictures of the rows of boarded up houses in pictures before, but seeing them in real life was both humbling and surreal.

Hillsborough Memorial
Hillsborough Memorial

Walking past the Hillsborough Memorial and into the Main Gates, we made our way to the museum entrance and joined our tour group. We were taken into the Players Entrance of the stadium, where the teams disembark from their coaches and go through to their changing rooms and one thing that strikes you is the size of the corridor – it’s tiny! We walked past all of the filming areas where the players stand to give their post-match interviews, and they’re literally just a couple of alcoves with the sponsorship on the walls!

On non-match days, tours are taken into the players locker room, but as it was match day that was off the cards. However, the West Brom kit man Pat Frost (who’s also England’s kit man) was kind enough to let us take a look around The Baggies locker room. It was a lot smaller than I’d imagined (although the tour guide told us that it was roughly the same size as the home team’s room) and we saw all the kit that West Brom were wearing on the day, laid out for them – including a pile of pants in the entryway!

West Brom Locker Room
West Brom Locker Room

Next on the tour was the legendary ‘This is Anfield’ sign – something I’ve seen on the tv literally hundreds of times. Walking through the tunnel, onto the pitch side and touching the sign was a dream come true for Husband and me. Anyone who supports Liverpool or follows the premier league will know how iconic and important that sign is to Liverpool FC – Bill Shankly put it there during his time as manager as a way to remind the oppositions that they were in the best stadium in the world. As the tour guide pointed out, it’s not a ‘Welcome to Anfield’, it’s ‘THIS IS ANFIELD’, a powerful statement which gives you one final jolt of nerves before walking out onto the pitch to face The Mighty Reds.

THIS IS ANFIELD sign
THIS IS ANFIELD sign

We sat in the dugout while the guides gave us some history of the ground, before moving over and sitting in the Kop, another iconic place in the world of Liverpool FC and football in general. The tour guides were so warm and welcoming and all of the information they gave was interesting and accessible. The tour group consisted of 5 year olds and 65 year olds, as well as everything in between, and they all managed to stay engaged during the talks.

The Spion Kop
The Spion Kop – named for a battle in The Boer War, in which many Scousers lost their lives

After the tour, we made our way to the museum, which is packed with memorabilia from the 116 year history of the club (a particular favourite of mine being the huge Robbie Fowler board which simply proclaimed his as ‘God’!), and got our photos taken with Stevie G and a replica of the European Cup (not the real Stevie, obvs, but almost!). There were optional headsets that we could have all used, but Husband and I opted to take it all in for ourselves, while Sausage took full advantage of the extra information available on the headset unit.

Once we’d done the tour and museum, we made our way to the Fun Zone, which is just across the road from the main gates of the stadium, and were really pleased with what we found. Entry was free and the area was filled with food stalls, picnic benches, and lots of fun set up for the whole family. We were peckish by this point, so we grabbed some burgers and sat and watched the Silky Skills man do some amazing things with a football and a keepie-uppy challenge. Sausage got her face painted with a Liver Bird and we bought some souvenirs (including two newborn LFC babygros for the baby!).

Soon, it was time to take our seats…

Tune in for Part Two of our Liverpool Experience to find out how the rest of our day went!

Thanks to the gorgeous Laura at Tired Mummy of Two who put us in touch with the LFC team.

22 thoughts on “Our Liverpool Experience – Part One #LFC

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  2. What an AMAZING day, and something that will stay with you forever no doubt. We have yet to do the Allianz Arena tour just up the road from us, but I doubt it will be as personal as this tour! πŸ™‚

  3. What a great experience for you. Even though I live with 5 males they aren’t into football so I do not really know much about it all. It is nice that there is a memorial for Hillsborough I never knew that

    1. Yep, there’s the official memorial outside which has beautiful floral tributes and shirts left all year round, as well as a flame that burns at all time, plus there’s a mosaic in the entrance to the museum with a tile for every one of the 96 who lost their lives, the youngest being Jon-Paul Gilhooley, who was just 10 at the time and the cousin of Steven Gerrard.

      You can see that it will be permanently etched into the club’s history and the fact that those families have had to wait this long for justice to be done is horrendous.

  4. What an exciting day and what a great tour! so many interesting facts here. Was the kop the goal end or where you were actually sitting? So amazing it’s named after the Boer war.
    We visited Liverpool a while back and loved the city centre with all the Beatles landmarks, I’d love to go back one day

    1. We were behind the opposition goal for the first half, opposite the Kop, so we had the best possible view for the first half when Luis started his hat-trick effort!

    1. I did see Goodison through the gaps in buildings on the way to Anfield and it just confirmed that I was definitely heading to the right side of the park πŸ˜›

  5. What a great day. We have done a couple of stadium tours in the past when our son was younger. I’m not really a football fan but I found them to be so interesting.
    We did visit Anfield once for a Liverpool v Newcastle match – we managed to get tickets from the parents of Jack Hobbs who was playing for Liverpool at the time (His mum works with my hubby). Felt a bit bad as we were supporting Newcastle!!

    1. Haha, don’t feel bad, Husband’s been and sat in the away stand before, all that matters is that you’re there supporting your team!

    1. The museum was packed full of so much stuff that I reckon even someone who wasn’t a fan would enjoy it and the atmosphere was so electrifying, it would have been hard for anyone, fan or not, to not have got caught up in it.

  6. Sounds like you had a good time! As a total non football person, most of it meant nothing to me at all – but your enthusiasm and your passion is evident in the post! Glad you guys enjoyed it!

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