Mantap.. ada juga Evertonians di sini....
--- In [email protected], "Prasetya" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> gw copy paste dari wikipedia ada yg di cut, gw ngambil point
pentingnya aja,
> lengkapanya search aja di wikipedia,
> walau sedikit pesimis, tp semoga semangat derby bisa membalikkan
keadaan ..
>
> ada fakta yg menarik menurut gw,
>
> sebenarnya scouser di UK sono tu gak kayak scouser turunan indon ..
> kebanyakan saling maki and musuhan
> "Unlike other local derbies (such as the Bristol, Birmingham and Stoke
> derbies) violence between Evertonians and Liverpudlians is a rarity.
An FA
> Cup weekend in 1980 saw Everton at home to Wrexham while Liverpool
> entertained Bury, at the final whistles both Everton and Liverpool
hooligans
> combined forces to attack the visiting Mancunian and Welsh fans. This
> incident caused the FA and Police to rule that same city clubs could no
> longer play home games on the same day.
> After the fall out from the Heysel Stadium disaster, fan relationships
> became strained, with Everton fans blaming Liverpool hooligans for their
> subsequent ban from the European club competitions. However, relations
> improved after the Hillsborough disaster when both sets of fans rallied
> together, Everton and Liverpool scarfs were intertwined stretching
across
> Stanley Park between Anfield and Goodison Park. Recently, after the
murder
> of 11 year old Rhys Jones in a gun crime incident in 2007, Liverpool
> Football Club invited the victim's parents and older brother to
Anfield for
> a Champions League match. The Z-Cars theme tune Johnny Todd, the
song which
> Everton traditionally run out to was played for the first time ever at
> Anfield while the victim's family stood on the pitch wearing Everton
shirts
> and scarfs. A standing ovation was given before You'll Never Walk
Alone was
> played."
>
> dan ini
>
> "It is quite rare for either team to beat the other in both league
games in
> one season. Liverpool have managed it 11 times and Everton 7 times.
An 8th
> Everton double would have occurred in the 1999-2000 season when Everton,
> having won 1-0 at Anfield, could have won the return at Goodison
when in the
> last minute Liverpool goalkeeper Sander Westerveld inadvertently
blasted a
> clearance against the back of Everton's Don Hutchison. Referee
Graham Poll
> disallowed the goal, claiming that time had already been called.
Poll later
> confessed in his autobiography that his decision was wrong and that
the goal
> should have stood."
>
> semoga gak ada lagi wasit yg grogi dlm menghadapi derby ini, semacam
wasit
> graham poll dan clatenburg dlm derby ini ..
> dan kallau berakhir seri lagi moga2 aja rafa gak ngomong lagi soal klub
> kecil ..
> "Let`s Face The Kop .. !! "
>
> -------------------------------------------
> Merseyside derby
> From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
> Jump to: navigation, search
>
> The Merseyside Derby is the name of the football match played
between the
> Everton and Liverpool football clubs, the two most successful clubs
from the
> city of Liverpool in the Merseyside area of England. It is the longest
> currently running top flight derby in England, having been at that level
> since 1962 when Liverpool were promoted to the First Division (later the
> Premier League) for the last time.
>
> Traditionally, the Merseyside Derby was referred to as The Friendly
Derby
> [1] because of the large amount of families who have both Reds and Blues
> supporters in them. With so many families and friends supporting
both clubs,
> it is not uncommon to see Evertonians and Liverpudlians sitting together
> during the derby. The 1984 Milk Cup final at Wembley had the strange
sight
> of almost all sections of the ground being mixed and combined chants of
> "Merseyside, Merseyside". From 1902 to 1932 the two clubs even
shared the
> same matchday programme.
>
> There a number of reasons for the "friendly derby" tag. Firstly the
clubs
> are situated in the north of the City and very close to each other, with
> only Stanley Park separating the two. Everton actually played at
Anfield,
> what is now Liverpool's ground before a rent dispute with the ground
owners
> saw Everton relocate to Goodison Park and the formation of Liverpool
F.C.
> Today there are no evident geographical, political, social, or religious
> divides as in other derbies, although for many years a clear sectarian
> divide did exist within the city (Kilfoyle, 2000) it is unclear how
(if at
> all) this influenced the support bases of the two clubs. During the
1950's
> and 1960's Everton were coined as the Catholic club mainly as a
result of
> successful Irish players Tommy Eglington, Peter Farrell and Jimmy
O'Neill.
> This, in turn (saying something about the fickleness of football fans)
> caused Liverpool to be thought of as Protestant club. However it
should be
> noted that this notional divide was never seen as a basis for
supporting a
> certain side as is the case with Celtic and Rangers. In truth both teams
> have strong support from all denominations as well as many fans from
> Presbyterian North Wales and Catholic Ireland. Most importantly, the
actual
> clubs themselves did not act to strengthen sectarian divides and in fact
> both clubs stem from a Methodist origin.
>
> Unlike other local derbies (such as the Bristol, Birmingham and Stoke
> derbies) violence between Evertonians and Liverpudlians is a rarity.
An FA
> Cup weekend in 1980 saw Everton at home to Wrexham while Liverpool
> entertained Bury, at the final whistles both Everton and Liverpool
hooligans
> combined forces to attack the visiting Mancunian and Welsh fans. This
> incident caused the FA and Police to rule that same city clubs could no
> longer play home games on the same day.
>
> After the fall out from the Heysel Stadium disaster, fan relationships
> became strained, with Everton fans blaming Liverpool hooligans for their
> subsequent ban from the European club competitions. However, relations
> improved after the Hillsborough disaster when both sets of fans rallied
> together, Everton and Liverpool scarfs were intertwined stretching
across
> Stanley Park between Anfield and Goodison Park. Recently, after the
murder
> of 11 year old Rhys Jones in a gun crime incident in 2007, Liverpool
> Football Club invited the victim's parents and older brother to
Anfield for
> a Champions League match. The Z-Cars theme tune Johnny Todd, the
song which
> Everton traditionally run out to was played for the first time ever at
> Anfield while the victim's family stood on the pitch wearing Everton
shirts
> and scarfs. A standing ovation was given before You'll Never Walk
Alone was
> played.
>
> The city of Liverpool is statistically the most successful football
city in
> England with Everton and Liverpool winning a combined 27 league
titles, and
> there has never been a season without one of either Everton or Liverpool
> competing in the top flight. Both clubs have rich histories, with
Everton
> being one of the twelve founder member clubs of the Football League.
Everton
> have only been relegated twice and have competed in over 100 seasons
of top
> flight football, more than any other English club. To date Everton
have won
> 9 League Championships, 5 FA Cup's and 1 European Cup Winners Cup.
Liverpool
> hold the current record of the most League Championships with 18.
They also
> have won the European Cup 5 times, more than any other English club
and the
> FA Cup on 7 occasions.
>
> Since 1892 the clubs have appeared almost every year in the
Liverpool Senior
> Cup, although Liverpool, Everton and Tranmere Rovers only field reserve
> sides against the likes of Prescot Cables, Southport and Marine. Everton
> hold 45 titles while Liverpool have won 38. Everton and Liverpool
also have
> affiliated women's teams playing in the Women's Premier League
>
> This season's derby at Goodison Park was won by Liverpool, and the next
> meeting will be at Anfield on 29 March 2008.
>
> Notable games
> The clubs first met in the Liverpool Senior Cup final which
Liverpool won
> 1-0 in 1893. However is was an amateur match and is not counted in
either
> clubs records an official Merseyside derby.
>
> The first ever League meeting was in the 1894/95 season when Everton
won 3-0
> at Goodison Park, it was only at Liverpool's sixth attempt that they
beat
> Everton with a 3-1 win in 1897/98 at Anfield.
>
> The FA Cup 5th Round tie, on the 11th March 1967 at Goodison Park, was
> watched by 64,318 fans, and a further 40,169 at Anfield on giant screen,
> making a total of 104,487. Everton won 1-0, with Alan Ball scoring the
> winner.
>
> The 1967 Charity Shield saw Everton play Liverpool at Goodison Park
with the
> reds winning 1-0. Before kick off, the League Championship which had
been
> won by Liverpool was paraded around the pitch along with the FA Cup
which
> Everton had won. Liverpool's Roger Hunt and Everton's Ray Wilson
both World
> Cup winners carried the Jules Rimet Trophy around the field for a lap of
> honour.
>
> The first meeting between the two sides at Wembley Stadium came in
the final
> of the 1984 League Cup with Liverpool eventually winning a replay
(at Maine
> Road, Manchester) after the first tie at Wembley was drawn.
>
> Later that year the clubs met again at Wembley Stadium in the FA Charity
> Shield. Everton emerged as the victors thanks to a Bruce Grobbelaar own
> goal.
>
> The 1986 and 1989 FA Cup finals are still the only Merseyside derby
finals
> in the competition to date with Liverpool victorious on both
occasions, 3-1
> and 3-2 (AET) respectively.
>
> On April 23, 1977 the two sides met in the semi-final of the FA Cup
at Maine
> Road, Manchester. Although Liverpool took the lead twice, Everton fought
> back twice, and appeared to have scored a winner when, with three
minutes to
> go, Bryan Hamilton turned in a cross from Ronnie Goodlass, only to
see the
> goal chalked off by referee Clive Thomas.
>
> November 6, 1982 saw a dominant Liverpool side beat Everton 5-0 at
Goodison
> Park with Ian Rush scoring 4 of the goals.
>
> March 1988 Liverpool were unbeated in 29 league games from the start
of the
> season (then a joint record) when a Wayne Clarke inspired Everton
won 1-0 at
> Goodison.
>
> On February 21, 1991, an epic 4-4 FA Cup match saw Everton come from
behind
> 4 times. It is generally regarded as one of the greatest Merseyside
derbies
> ever. Everton won a replay days later and Liverpool's manager Kenny
Dalglish
> subsequently resigned.
>
> 27th September 1999 saw Everton's last win at Anfield. Kevin
Campbell scored
> the only goal in a game which saw first Steven Gerrard sent off,
then late
> on, after squaring up to each other in a classic case of "handbags",
> Liverpool's Sander Westerveld and Everton's Francis Jeffers.
>
> - In 2005/06, Liverpool completed a League double over Everton,
beating them
> 3-1 at Goodison Park thanks to goals from Peter Crouch, Steven
Gerrard and
> Djibril Cisse, Everton had 2 players sent off in Phil Neville and Mikel
> Arteta. Liverpool then beat them at Anfield 3-1 in a classic derby,
Steven
> Gerrard got sent off inside 20 minutes with 2 bookable offences and
> Liverpool had to battle on with 10 men. On the stroke of half time, Phil
> Neville headed into his own net from a Xabi Alonso corner and immedietly
> after half time Luis Garcia chipped Richard Wright from a Jose Reina
pass to
> make it 2-0 to the ten men. Everton hit back through Tim Cahill
before Andy
> Van Der Meyde got sent off for allegedly elbowing Xabi Alonso, the
game was
> wrapped up when Harry Kewell scored from 25 yards in front of the Kop.
>
> - The 2006 Goodison Park derby saw Everton beating Liverpool 3-0,
scoring
> three goals for the first time in a league derby since 1966, and the
first
> time at Goodison since 1904 with goals from Tim Cahill and a double from
> (then) club record signing Andy Johnson. This was only Everton's
second win
> over Liverpool in seven years and took them to the top of the Premier
> League.
>
> - The 2007 derby at Goodison became controversial when Everton, who were
> leading at the end of the first half through a Sami Hyypia own goal,
were
> denied two penalty appeals both involving Joleon Lescott, first with
Steve
> Finnan and then with Jamie Carragher in the last few seconds of the
game.
> Liverpool won the game 2-1 thanks to two Dirk Kuyt penalties with
Everton
> having both Philip Neville and Tony Hibbert sent off.The referee
originally
> looked to give Tony Hibbert a yellow card until Steven Gerrard seemingly
> spoke to the referee and his decision was changed to a red card.
Just before
> the first penalty was given, Kuyt committed an aggressive tackle on
Philip
> Neville, which most of the crowd citation needed, including the
Liverpool
> fans citation needed, were certain was to end in a red card for the
> Dutchman. However, referee Mark Clattenberg chose to show him a
yellow, and
> Kuyt went on to score both of the penalties that gave Liverpool
victory, and
> Clattenberg's performance in the game was widely criticised by both the
> fans, and the FA citation needed.
>
> Doing the Double
> It is quite rare for either team to beat the other in both league
games in
> one season. Liverpool have managed it 11 times and Everton 7 times.
An 8th
> Everton double would have occurred in the 1999-2000 season when Everton,
> having won 1-0 at Anfield, could have won the return at Goodison
when in the
> last minute Liverpool goalkeeper Sander Westerveld inadvertently
blasted a
> clearance against the back of Everton's Don Hutchison. Referee
Graham Poll
> disallowed the goal, claiming that time had already been called.
Poll later
> confessed in his autobiography that his decision was wrong and that
the goal
> should have stood.
>
>
>
> -------------------------------------------------
>
>
>
> "Evertonians are Born, Not Manufactured
> We do not Choose, We are Chosen
> Those who Understand, Need No Explanation
> Those That Don't Understand, Don't Matter"
>
> -------------------------------------------------
>
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>