Categories: Sport

Why playing the national anthem at Anfield for King Charles’ coronation could be an issue

Liverpool confirmed it would play the national anthem ahead of Saturday’s game against Brentford.

Joe Prior/Visionhaus/Getty Images


CNN
 — 

Liverpool has confirmed it will play “God Save the King” ahead of its match against Brentford on Saturday to respect the coronation of King Charles III, despite the club admitting that many supporters hold “strong views” on the issue.

Liverpool fans have a history of booing the national anthem, most recently doing so before last season’s FA Cup final at Wembley – many also booed Prince William when he appeared on the pitch.

The decision comes after the Premier League requested that the national anthem be played ahead of every match this weekend to celebrate the coronation services of the King and the Queen Consort, which take place on Saturday.

“Before kick-off and in recognition of the Premier League’s request to mark the coronation, players and officials will congregate around the centre circle when the national anthem will be played,” Liverpool said in a statement Friday.

“It is, of course, a personal choice how those at Anfield on Saturday mark this occasion and we know some supporters have strong views on it.”

Why fans boo?

So why exactly do Liverpool fans have a history of booing the monarchy? The answer has everything to do with the history of the city itself.

Liverpool suffered during the deindustrialization of the UK economy in the 1970s and 1980s. In 1981, appalling economic conditions, combined with tensions between the police and the African-Caribbean community, resulted in nine days of riots in the city.

Soccer Football – Premier League – Liverpool v Nottingham Forest – Anfield, Liverpool, Britain – April 22, 2023
Nottingham Forest fans hold up a banner in memory of the 97 victims of the Hillsborough disaster REUTERS/Phil Noble

Phil Noble/Reuters

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In the aftermath of the unrest, Margaret Thatcher’s government talked of a “managed decline” of the city.

During this decade of Conservative rule, Liverpudlians came to see themselves as outsiders, separate from the rest of the country, and the state’s handling of the Hillsborough disaster in 1989 further entrenched those anti-establishment feelings.

Booing of the national anthem at football matches when the team played at Wembley – which was frequent given Liverpool’s dominance of English football in this era – became widespread and remains so today.

Many fans had the same reaction at the Carabao Cup final in February 2022 and at the FA Cup final in 2012.

Liverpool fans have a history of booing the national anthem.

Adam Davy/Press Association/AP

Booing the anthem is a way for some of the club’s supporters to voice their opposition towards the establishment, and it’s a chance to do so before a worldwide audience.

The King’s coronation on Saturday also comes at a time when many are feeling the devastating effects of the severe cost of living crisis that is now impacting the whole of the UK.

Liz Coopey, left, a volunteer at the Given Freely Freely Given food bank in Doncaster, helps local resident Angela Davis with her shopping bags.

Ivana Kottasova/CNN

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High inflation, years of wage stagnation and the sudden and steep rise in energy prices have left millions of Brits on the brink of poverty.

At the same time, the UK government is spending tens of millions of taxpayers’ money on a glitzy celebration.

Social and economic inequality is something that continues to anger many in the left-leaning city of Liverpool.

Significantly, it was Liverpool and Everton supporters who started Fans’ Supporting Foodbanks in 2015, an initiative which aims to tackle food poverty in the UK.

Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp says it was a topic he couldn’t fully comment on.

Craig Mercer/MB Media/Getty Images

Jurgen Klopp’s comments

When asked about the club’s decision to play the national anthem on Saturday, Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp said “the club’s position is my position.”

“This is definitely a subject I cannot have a proper opinion about it. I am from Germany, we don’t have a king, or a queen, or these kind of things,” he told reporters on Friday.

“I am pretty sure a lot of people in this country will enjoy the coronation, some will maybe not really be interested, and some will not like it. That’s it. That’s all over the country.”

Many feared Liverpool fans might disrupt a minute’s silence for Queen Elizabeth II after her death last year but, on that occasion, only a few isolated boos were heard.

And, in an article written on Friday, football journalist Dominic King suggested Liverpool fans might just sing the club’s own anthem “You’ll Never Walk Alone” instead of “God Save The King” on Saturday.

CNN’s Ivana Kottasová contributed reporting.

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