Brendan Rodgers, Roberto Martinez, Steven Gerrard and Daniel Sturridge look ahead to the Liverpool v Everton match. 5) The first game after Hillsborough -- May 1989 Indeed, that was not the first time the teams had faced each other after Hillsborough. Aside from a charity game to raise funds for the victims' families against Celtic, the first game Liverpool played after the disaster was a Merseyside derby, on May 3 at Goodison. The score was 0-0, but the game didn't really matter. "The city really bonded together after the tragedy," said Colin Harvey, then Everton manager, years later. "I know Kenny (Dalglish) and the Liverpool players went to many funerals, while myself and (Everton coach) Terry Darracott attended some too." 4) Gary Mac comes up with the goods -- April 2001 Stop laughing at the back, but Liverpool had genuine designs on the Premier League title back in Houllier's day. Gary McAllister, 35-years-old and recently out of contract at Coventry, was not the sort of signing that a team with genuine designs on the Premier League title generally go for, and was greeted variously with head-scratching and mocking. However, Gary Mac was a surprise hit at Anfield, playing a big part in some big games of the trophy-laden 2000/01 season, not least in this derby at Goodison. Houllier picked McAllister in place of Steven Gerrard, who was rested for a midweek game against Barcelona, and like the signing itself, the decision paid off handsomely. Emile Heskey gave Liverpool the lead, Duncan Ferguson equalised then Markus Babbel put them back ahead. It looked like Liverpool had thrown away the win by giving David Unsworth a penalty, then up stepped McAllister, spotting Everton keeper Paul Gerrard expecting a cross from a 40-yard free-kick. The cross didn't come, rather a shot into the bottom corner. 3) The Everton double -- May 1985 Everton have never achieved the double, but they wrapped up a double and simultaneously celebrated in front of their rivals at the end of the 1985 season, the most successful in the club's history. The league title was already well won by the time Liverpool crossed Stanley Park, Everton having outstripped their rivals by a whopping 13 points. Indeed, Everton already had the European Cup Winners' Cup in the bag, and were denied a remarkable season by their defeat in the FA Cup final to Manchester United the previous week. The game itself wasn't especially memorable (Everton won 1-0 thanks to a Paul Wilkinson goal) but it was, for one of the few times, a confirmation that the blue half of the city was far superior. 2) The Liverpool double -- May 1986 These days, after Manchester United, Arsenal and Chelsea all achieved it in relatively recent times, the double doesn't seem like a massive deal. Back in the 1980s, it very much was, as only four teams had achieved it before, and two of those were Preston and Aston Villa in the 1890s. Liverpool joined those two, Tottenham 1960/61 and Arsenal 1970/71 by sealing the FA Cup a week after pipping Everton to the league title via Kenny Dalglish's goal at Chelsea. Howard Kendall's team had been in the title race all season, and indeed were eight points clear at one stage, but they were overhauled by Dalglish's men. They looked like they might take revenge after Gary Lineker gave them the lead at Wembley, but Ian Rush grabbed a brace (and nearly got a hat-trick) and Craig Johnston scored the other, and the double was won. 1) Goals, goals, goals, goals, then Kenny resigns -- February 1991 An extraordinary game for what occurred both during and after it. In this FA Cup fourth round replay at Goodison, Liverpool took the lead four times, only for Everton to equalise four times. Peter Beardsley got two while John Barnes (a majestic curling right-footer) and Ian Rush also found the net, only to be pegged back by braces from Tony Cottee and Graham Sharp, the game ending 4-4 after extra-time. A Dave Watson goal would be enough to win the second replay for Everton a week later, but not before perhaps the most surprising announcement in Liverpool history. When a press conference was called for 11 a.m. on the morning of February 22, nobody really knew what was going on. There was speculation that a player might be leaving, or that one would be arriving, but it was to announce that Kenny Dalglish had resigned, the pressures of the job and the residual stress of Hillsborough, less than two years previously, proving too much to take. "The stress that comes right before and after games has got the better of me," he said. "Some might have difficulty understanding my decision but this decision stands. I would be betraying everyone if I wouldn't let them know there is something wrong."