Friday, April 15, 2016

A sombre service has begun to mark the final Hillsborough memorial at Anfield, 27 years to the day after the tragedy.

Loved ones of the 96 who died have been joined at the home of Liverpool FC’s by past and present club legends and around 25,000 ordinary fans to mark today’s emotional anniversary.


Tributes left outside Anfield today.

Families of the 96 unanimously agreed this year’s service, held annually on April 15 to mark the 1989 disaster, would be the last major public event at Anfield.

Today VIPs sat in the stands in honour of the fans who lost their lives as the service began on the pitch in front of the Spion Kop.


Manager Jurgen Klopp (right) and Jordan Henderson lead the players and staff as they arrive at Anfield.

Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp and his players received a rousing reception as they took their place for the service, following last night’s last-gasp heroics in their Europa Cup tie.

England manager Roy Hodgson was also among the VIP guests in seats on the Kop, along with Kenny Dalglish and many of the team playing from the days of the disaster in 1989, including Alan Hansen and Mark Lawrenson. Former Anfield great Kevin Keegan was also in attendance, as was Everton manager Roberto Martinez.


Everton manager Roberto Martinez (centre) during the memorial service at Anfield.

The service began with the traditional football hymn, Abide With Me, before silence fell as the names of the 96 were read aloud.

All died after the crush on the Leppings Lane terraces at Sheffield Wednesday’s Hillsborough stadium after going to see their team play Nottingham Forest in an FA Cup semi-final on April 15 1989.

As each name was read a light was lit, one by one, on a large art sculpture entitled The Band Of Life, until all the lights were illuminated.


Flowers are laid at the side of the pitch before the last memorial service to be held at Anfield.

As the time reached 3.06pm, the exact moment the match was abandoned as the tragedy unfolded, a minute’s silence began.

In the city’s main streets and shopping thoroughfares, public transport was halted and the hum and noise from outside the ground faded as a hush fell across the city, while Anfield, often a cauldron of noise, also fell into a sombre stillness.

Some fans wiped away silent tears as they remembered the scores of lives lost in Britain’s worst sporting disaster.

The minute’s silence ended with a round of applause, as across the city bells tolled 96 times at the city’s Metropolitan Cathedral.

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