Carragher recalls tragic day

13 April 2009 17:45
Liverpool defender and boyhood Everton fan Jamie Carragher has relived the moment he realised the extent of the Hillsborough tragedy. Wednesday marks the 20th anniversary of the disaster at Sheffield Wednesday's stadium that cost the lives of 96 fans. These days being a local boy Carragher is inevitably at the forefront when the club mark the anniversary each year with a memorial service at Anfield. But back in 1989, Carragher - now 31 - was a fervent Everton fan. He had been at the other FA Cup semi-final that day watching the Toffees beat Norwich 1-0 at Villa Park with a Pat Nevin goal. But elation soon turned to worry and fear for the then 11-year-old Carragher. Carragher told the official Liverpool website: "I was just 11, quite young but old enough to understand what was happening. "In those days the semi-finals were played on the same day and at the same time, me being an Everton fan I was at Villa Park watching Everton play Norwich. "I just remember an announcement at half-time that the Liverpool game had been abandoned. It was before mobile phones so no-one really understood what was going on. But obviously we knew there was a problem. "It wasn't until we heard on the radio in the car on the way back to Liverpool what had really happened. It's amazing how it's 20 years ago and that it took people so long to find out. It just goes to show the difference between today and then." He added: "Our family were all Everton fans but we knew of one relative who went to the Liverpool game, so it was on the way home when we were trying to find out if everything was OK, and then we found out he didn't have a ticket in the Leppings Lane end. "He was in the stand so we knew everything was OK in that respect, but you always know someone who knows someone who was affected. "I just remember being at school, and being in assemblies singing 'You'll Never Walk Alone', which was usually hard for Evertonians on other occasions. "But I remember the first Liverpool game afterwards, I think it was Celtic, but their first real competitive game was against Everton and I was in the Gwladys Street end. "I remember having a strange feeling for that game. Normally you are desperate to win but it was a strange type of game, which I think finished 0-0. The result didn't matter. "It was just special that the first game was between those two sides after the event and both teams went on to the FA Cup final that season." Carragher is now determined to make sure that the memory of the 96 who died is never forgotten. "It is essential that we don't forget, it is something that we have all got behind over the years. "It changed the face of football with the type of stadiums we have and the way people watch football now is probably down to the tragedy, which is a sad thing but hopefully it will never happen again because of those reasons. "It is something we will never forget, we will hold the memorial at Anfield every season, and rightly so. We should never forget and we realise what it means to the club." This year the families of the 96 who died have received the freedom of the city, and Carragher said: "They have conducted themselves superbly. "You always put yourself in their shoes, having children of my own. I don't know if I could have behaved as well as them, I know that your kids are your life. "For people to send family and friends away to a game and for them to not return is a terrible thought. It terrifies you just thinking about it, so what those people have gone through is unbelievable and the way they have behaved is impeccable. And they are still fighting for

Source: Eurosport