"Dick" Allman was Burslem Port Vale's top scorer in the 1904/05 season with eight goals in 27 second division matches as his club struggled at the wrong end of the table. He joined Reading in the Southern league in May 1905, scoring 17 goals in 63 matches. He made short stops at Portsmouth and Plymouth Argyle before heading north to Liverpool in July 1908. Allman's one and only appearance in the Football League for Liverpool came at home to Bristol City on 13 March 1909. Just for the record, the visitors won the game 2-1. After…
| Season | League | FA | LC | Europe | Other | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Totals | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| 1908-1909 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Season | League | FA | LC | Europe | Other | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Totals | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 1908-1909 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
LFChistory has profiles of all players who have appeared on Liverpool's teamsheet since the 1892/93 season, including players who never made an appearance for the first team, but made the bench at one time or another.
We've got all the results from official games, appearance & goal stats from 1892 to the present, every single line-up and substitutions!
How many games Liverpool have played against a club, the business done between them, our form and which players have been most successful in their encounters. The most complete profile of our opponents you will find anywhere!
"I played some bad games, there were games when I was so disappointed with myself and for the supporters because I know I could play better.
I thought my best games were in a more central position but it's hard for the manager because since I've been at Liverpool every midfield player has wanted to play in the centre. I understand that but for the Czech team I play behind one or two strikers."
Etihad Stadium | Sunday 09 Nov 2025
| Manchester City | Liverpool | |
|---|---|---|
| 3 | - | 0 |
Digitalization is permanently changing sports culture: how sports content is produced and consumed. Community and fandom have always been part of sports, celebrated in stadiums with faces painted in team colours. Today, however, the fan community has shifted online, fundamentally changing the way fans interact with each other, clubs, and their idols. Fans from all over the world meet digitally, reminisce about glorious moments in real time, share funny memes, and actively shape the culture surrounding their club. Liverpool club culture, too, is being redefined in this way.
Modern football is shaped by data, high presses, inverted full-backs, and algorithm-driven player positioning. But Liverpool FC’s journey to tactical sophistication didn’t start with Jurgen Klopp or Rafa Benítez; it began over a century ago, in muddy fields with rigid formations and a very different understanding of the game. The club’s early tactical history reveals not just the roots of Liverpool’s footballing philosophy, but also key decisions that mirrored and sometimes led wider changes in English football.
The enduring Boot Room tradition at Liverpool FC represents far more than a small room beneath the old Main Stand at Anfield. It embodies a deeply rooted culture of internal promotion and shared coaching wisdom at the storied club. This famed small room became an informal incubator for a dynasty of legendary Anfield managers, including Bob Paisley and Joe Fagan.