Locale | North West England |
---|---|
Teams |
Liverpool F.C. Manchester United F.C. |
First meeting | 28 April 1894 1893–94 Football League test match Liverpool 2–0 Newton Heath |
Latest meeting | 15 January 2017 Premier League Manchester United 1–1 Liverpool |
Stadiums |
Anfield (Liverpool) Old Trafford (Manchester United) |
Statistics | |
Meetings total | 198 |
Most player appearances | Ryan Giggs (48) |
Top scorer |
Steven Gerrard (9) George Wall (9) Sandy Turnbull (9) |
All-time series | Liverpool: 65 Drawn: 54 Manchester United: 79 |
Largest victory | Liverpool 7–1 Newton Heath 12 October 1895 (1895–96 Second Division) |
The Liverpool F.C.–Manchester United F.C. rivalry, also known as the North-West Derby, is a high profile inter-city rivalry between English professional football clubs Liverpool and Manchester United. It is considered to be one of the biggest rivalries in the football world along with the Superclásico in South America, El Clásico in Spain, and Derby della Madonnina in Italy, and is considered the most famous fixture in English football. Players, fans and the media alike often consider games between the two clubs to be their biggest rivalry, above even their own local derby competitions with Everton and Manchester City, respectively.
The rivalry has been fuelled by the proximity of the two major cities that they represent, their historic economic and industrial rivalry, significant periods of domestic footballing dominance and European success, and their popularity at home and abroad, as two of the biggest-earning and widely supported football clubs in the world.
The two clubs are the most successful English teams in both domestic and European competitions; and between them they have won 38 league titles, 8 European Cups, 3 UEFA Cups, 4 UEFA Super Cups, 19 FA Cups, 12 League Cups, 1 FIFA Club World Cup, 1 Intercontinental Cup and 36 FA Community Shields.
The cities of Liverpool and Manchester are located in the north west of England, 35 miles (56 km) apart. Since the industrial revolution there has been a consistent theme of rivalry between the two cities based around economic and industrial competition. Manchester through to the 18th century was the far more populous city, and held a position of significance and notability as representative of the north. By the late 18th century, Liverpool had grown as a major sea port – critical to the growth and success of the northern cotton mills. Over the next century, Liverpool grew to supersede Manchester and throughout the late 19th and early 20th century was often described as the British Empire's second city. The links between the two cities were strengthened with the construction of the Bridgewater Canal, the Mersey and Irwell Navigation and the Liverpool and Manchester Railway for the transport of raw materials inland.