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It is generally agreed that the events at the Hysel Stadium at the following season's European cup tickets Final had a devastating impact on the manager and he resigned soon after. Kenny Dalglish then became the first top-flight player manager in English football, successfully combining both roles. Three championships and two FA cup ticketss meant that, although the club were no longer competing in Europe because of the post-Hysel ban, the successes were still plentiful. At the beginning of the 90s, though - after Hillsborough and with the resignation of King Kenny - the Glory days came to an end.

Liverpool have, of course, continued to win trophies and remain one of the very best teams in Europe. In recent seasons, after all, they have captured the Champions' League, UEFA cup tickets and two FA and League cup ticketss. Still no sign of that elusive league title, though.

The Glory days were glorious indeed. Successive teams still run off the tongue to this day - Lawrence, Lawler, Byrne, Strong, Yeats, Stevenson, Callaghan, Hunt, St John, Smith, Thompson from the 1960s; Clemence, Neal, Jones, Smith, Kennedy, Hughes, Keegan, Case, Heighway, Callaghan, McDermott from the 1970s (with supersub Fairclough); Clemence, Neal, A Kennedy, Thompson, R Kennedy, Hansen, Dalglish, Lee, Johnson, McDermott, Souness from the early 80s; and others containing some of the English game's greatest players - Rush, Toshack, Lawrenson, Beardsley, and many, many more.
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Liverpool won the league title under Shankly for the first time in 1963 - 64; interestingly enough Manchester United, Everton, Spurs and Chelsea were the next four teams in the League, which had no fewer than 15 teams that are in this season's Premier League. (There's a good quiz question for you!) This was just the beginning of Liverpool's glorious era of domination of English, and European, football; Shankly's teams, driven by his amazing motivational powers, won the league again in 1966 and 1973, the FA cup tickets in 1965 and 1974 and their first European competition, the UEFA cup tickets, in 1973, with two goals from Kevin Keegan.

After Shankly's retirement, Bob Paisley gained even more success, winning an almost unbelievable 21 trophies during his nine seasons as manager. As well as another UEFA cup tickets success, this haul included no fewer than three European cup tickets successes in 1997, 1998 and 1981 and six league titles. The Liverpool machine looked completely unstoppable.

When the affable Paisley retired - Mark Lawrenson affectionately likened him to a favourite grandfather when he arrived to sign him from Brighton in his carpet slippers - the continuity that was so important at this time continued with the appointment of his right-hand man, Joe Fagan. In his first season as manager, 1983/84, Fagan's team became the first in England to win three trophies in one season - the European cup tickets, League and League cup tickets.