The rivalry between Liverpool and Manchester United has become almost 
unique in its intensity since the Premier League's balance of power 
shifted from Merseyside along the M62 in the early 1990s. 
The two cities do not simply share a sporting rivalry 
but also a cultural and industrial one - something mirrored most starkly
 in the relationship between two of world football's greatest clubs.
  
    
	
				
Liverpool and Man Utd honours
	
			
			
			
	
		
		
				
						
						
		
	
		
			| Competition | Liverpool | United | 
						
						
		
	
		
			| League titles 
 | 18 
 | 19 
 | 
	
		
			| FA Cups 
 | 7 
 | 11 
 | 
	
		
			| League Cups 
 | 8 
 | 4 
 | 
	
		
			| Community Shield 
 | 15 
 | 19 
 | 
	
		
			| European Cup/Champions League 
 | 5 
 | 3 
 | 
	
		
			| Cup-Winners' Cup 
 | 0 
 | 1 
 | 
	
		
			| Uefa Cup 
 | 3 
 | 0 
 | 
	
		
			| Uefa Super Cup 
 | 3 
 | 1 
 | 
	
		
			| Intercontinental Cup 
 | 0 
 | 1 
 | 
	
		
			| Club World Cup 
 | 0 
 | 1 
 | 
	
		
			| Total 
 | 59 
 | 60 
 | 
 
 
 
    Covering one of my first 
meetings between Liverpool and United at Anfield in 1988 I got a close 
up view of then manager Kenny Dalglish carrying his six-week old 
daughter Lauren in his arms while enraging counterpart Sir Alex Ferguson
 in the tunnel by suggesting a radio interviewer might get more sense 
interrogating the baby than his fellow Scot.
It was a snapshot of the fierce competition that has 
always existed between Liverpool and United but the incident now falls 
into the category of mild banter given what has become, and few would 
dispute this, an increasingly poisonous relationship between the 
supporters in recent years.
  
              Tension has built as United have amassed league titles - eventually eclipsing Liverpool's 18 top-flight trophies 
    
with their 19th in 2011. 
  
              The rivalry has led to concerns that what should be an 
occasion for remembrance, emotion and sympathy when they meet in the 
Premier League at Anfield on Sunday - as Liverpool play at home for the 
first time since the 
    
release of the Hillsborough files 
     - might be hijacked by a small minority intent on ill-feeling as opposed to empathy. 
  
    
		Continue reading the main story	
	 
	
		“United and Liverpool have suffered great tragedies as clubs so there should be empathy between them”
	
Mark Lawrenson, who played 356 times for Liverpool between 1981-88
        
 
 
    And yet the actions of both 
clubs in the build-up to Sunday's game suggests this day could yet be a 
watershed in that fractious relationship between fans, a day when the 
unity that has been shown within football following the disclosure of 
the Hillsborough documents relating to the 1989 disaster could heal 
long-standing wounds.
This will be the wish of the overwhelming majority of 
Liverpool and United supporters inside and outside Anfield, and those in
 the boardrooms, at these two English and European superpowers.
  
              As those who died at the FA Cup semi-final between 
Liverpool and Nottingham Forest in 1989 are remembered on Sunday, the 
occasion has the potential to become a turning point, a force for good 
in forging a new bond between the clubs' followers.
  
              BBC Sport football pundit
    
     Mark Lawrenson, 
    who played in many Liverpool-Manchester United matches, says the eyes of the sporting world will be on Anfield on Sunday. 
  
              "This is Liverpool's first game at home since the 
release of the Hillsborough files and no-one wants anything to detract 
from the meaning of this occasion followed by the importance of a 
showpiece Premier League game," he said. 
  
              "Concerns have been expressed after a 
    
small number of United fans sang anti-Liverpool songs
 
     during last week's win against Wigan but I fully expect this to be a
 day reflecting the mood of so many decent supporters on both sides.
  
              "Liverpool fans have been guilty themselves in the past
 of singing songs about the Munich air crash but Hillsborough rises 
above club loyalties.
  
              "I also think anyone who is tempted to try to mar the 
occasion will find themselves being embarrassed by their fellow 
supporters. 
  
    
	
				
Liverpool v Man Utd head-to-head record in all competitions
	
			
			
	
		
		
				
						
						
		
	
		
			| Played 
 | 185 
 | 
	
		
			| Liverpool wins 
 | 62 
 | 
	
		
			| Man Utd wins 
 | 72 
 | 
	
		
			| Draws 
 | 51 
 | 
 
 
 
    "And with plans for opposing 
    
captains Steven Gerrard and Nemanja Vidic to release 96 balloons
 
     before kick-off in memory of those who died in 1989, I am convinced
 it will be a day that will do everyone inside Anfield enormous credit.
"It may even be the time when fractures in the relationship between the two sets of supporters are repaired.
  
              "United and Liverpool have suffered great tragedies as 
clubs so there should be empathy between them. It is these tragic events
 and how they have handled them that contribute to their greatness. They
 are part of these clubs' history so there should be that mutual 
respect.
  
              "Sir Alex Ferguson has very publicly offered United's 
support to Liverpool. He will stand alongside Liverpool because this is 
not an issue of club loyalty or a time for rivalries. Hillsborough goes 
beyond that."
  
    
	
				
Ferguson's record vs Liverpool
	
			
			
			
			
			
			
	
		
		
				
						
						
		
	
		
			| P 61 
 | W 28 
 | D 14 
 | L 19 
 | F 80 
 | A 72 
 | 
 
 
 
    Manchester United manager Sir 
Alex Ferguson, who will take charge of his 62nd match against Liverpool 
on Sunday, admits that the rivalry between the cities goes back a long 
way further than football. 
The building of the Manchester ship canal in the 1880s 
is often cited as the source of that historic discontent. The canal 
bypassed the Port of Liverpool, leading to job losses on Merseyside and 
disgruntlement with the new competition - it is mentioned still on the 
Mersey Ferry tour. 
  
              Ferguson said: "The thing about us and Liverpool is the rivalry. They are the most fantastic games. 
  
              "They're unparalleled in British history in terms of 
the success of both clubs and that's why we need each other. From an 
industrial point of view, the way industry changed when they opened the 
ship canal - [the rivalry] is all to do with it." 
  
    
   
    
The building of the Manchester ship canal in the 1880s bypassed the Port of Liverpool
  
 
Football is so important in north-west daily life that the broader culture can be infected. 
  
              Music is an example of that - while the Beatles struck 
the first telling blow for Liverpool, Manchester hit back with the likes
 of Joy Division, New Order, the Smiths, the Stone Roses and Oasis. And 
yet this is a rivalry that lives in football and was fuelled by modern 
success, first Liverpool's, then United's.
  
              It is striking that Phil Chisnall, who left Old 
Trafford for Anfield in 1964, remains the last player to be transferred 
directly between the clubs. As with music, civic and cultural 
achievements, success in football has been cyclical from the moment 
United won the European Cup in 1968.
  
              At the time, the Liverpool Echo wrote: "British 
football can be proud of the United team who gave their all to give Matt
 Busby the cup he cherishes above all else. It's been a long, long drive
 for United to reach the top in Europe - no-one will begrudge them being
 the first English club to make it."
  
              How times change. In 2005, when the Manchester Evening 
News reported Liverpool's Champions League triumph in Istanbul with the 
headline "Beyond Belief", the paper was inundated with complaints.
  
              The eyes of the footballing world will be on Anfield on Sunday. Hopefully, the rivalry can be a respectful one.