Anfield has been Liverpool FC's home since 1892, a tight, steep-sided ground in the heart of the city where the crowd sits right on top of the pitch. The Main Stand and the towering Anfield Road Stand, expanded in 2024, now wrap around one of the loudest atmospheres in English football. On matchdays the streets around the ground fill hours before kickoff, with fans touching the Bill Shankly Gates and the Hillsborough memorial on the way in. It remains an intimate, old-school bowl even after every modern expansion, which is exactly what visiting teams dread most.
Built in 1884 and originally home to Everton FC before a rent dispute sent Everton to Goodison Park and Liverpool FC was formed to take over the ground, Anfield has anchored the club ever since. The Kop end and the pre-match roar of "You'll Never Walk Alone" make it one of football's great cauldrons, the backdrop to countless European nights — none more famous than the 2005 comeback against AC Milan that set up the "Miracle of Istanbul," and the stunning 2019 semi-final turnaround against Barcelona. The Main Stand redevelopment (2016) and Anfield Road Stand expansion (2024) have steadily grown capacity while preserving the ground's steep, close-in character. Few stadiums in the world carry as much collective folklore in their walls.
Source: RateGame editorial