They played 'We Will Rock You' before the players ran out at Huish Park - and
by the time the final whistle went Liverpool at times had been shaken and
stirred by lowly Yeovil.
But they had won through to the fourth round of the FA Cup and given manager
Gerard Houllier some much-needed breathing space.
Emile Heskey came off the bench to fire home the 69th-minute opener which put
them on their way.
And Liverpool required another England star in the shape of Danny Murphy to
secure the victory from the penalty spot after Harry Kewell had been brought
down.
The fact that Liverpool goalkeeper Jerzy Dudek was one of the busiest players
on a tense afternoon also tells of the courage of the Third Division side.
So there was no shock. But there was romance by the bucketful on a
mist-shrouded afternoon in front of a record crowd of 9,348 fans, all determined
to have a party whatever the result.
At the end the fans gave their Yeovil heroes a standing ovation on a prolonged
lap of honour and they deserved every cheer for a display in which at times it
was difficult to decide which was the team from the Premiership.
The FA Cup is renowned for its comparisons between the mighty and the minnows
but this tie was more extreme than most.
Liverpool have won 18 league championships, six FA Cups, seven League Cups,
four European Cups, three UEFA Cups and two European Super Cups. Yeovil have
been in the Football league a mere five months.
No contest then. Except that is rarely how it works in the most famous
domestic knockout competition, especially when Yeovil boss Gary Johnson had the
distinction of being able to boast international experience as the former
manager of Latvia.
Still, Yeovil, whose fans had packed the main stand almost two hours before
kick-off, required a miracle.
The fact that it threatened to arrive as they taunted the Liverpool fans with
chants of 'Who are you?' is a comment on the fragility these days of Liverpool
who decided not to risk Michael Owen, still recuperating from a series of
injuries which have seen him play only four matches since October.
As it was Liverpool might have gone ahead in the 23rd minute when El Hadji
Diouf swung over a left-foot cross which Vladimir Smicer steered towards goal
but Yeovil goalkeeper Chris Weale was alert to the danger.
A minute later, however, it was Dudek who was required to perform acrobatics,
first diving to his right to turn away a stinging right-foot shot from Gavin
Williams and then seconds later getting down swiftly to turn away a close-range
effort from Darren Way.
At that stage there was no question the Third Division side were playing most
of the fluent football even if their plans were disrupted in the 38th minute
when Paul Terry, brother of Chelsea's John, was replaced by Andrew Lindegaard
after being injured in a clash with John Arne Riise.
True, Liverpool might have gone in with the lead at half-time as the mist
descended, Smicer breaking clear on the right before crossing, only to see Diouf
fire wide from 12 yards.
It was the sort of chance Owen would have devoured and there is no doubt this
Liverpool side were missing their England striker and the driving presence of
midfielder Steven Gerrard.
So much so that the players who caught the eye were almost exclusively the
busy and bustling characters from Yeovil.
Way, in particular, was an inspiration, combating the international talents of
Murphy and Dietmar Hamann with huge aplomb.
But, in truth, there were heroes in green and white hoops all over Huish Park.
Not least the huge presence of Hugo Rodrigues, at 6ft 8in the tallest player in
the Football League and who stood as steadfast in defence as the pillars at
nearby Stonehenge.
And then there was midfielder Lee Johnson, the 22-year-old son of Yeovil's
manager and whose composure suggested he has a bright future at a higher level.
Yeovil came close to going ahead seconds after the interval when a slick move
ended with striker Kevin Gall's right-foot volley from eight yards being blocked
by a fraught Liverpool defence.
It prompted Houllier to seek more firepower and after 50 minutes he threw on
Heskey in place of Florent Sinama-Pongolle.
It almost worked immediately, Heskey racing through only to see his left-foot
shot strike the body of goalkeeper Weale. But at last there was urgency and
power where before there had been too much hesitancy.
In the 61st minute Yeovil were thankful to the woodwork for keeping their
hopes alive. Liverpool worked the ball on the right before it was played inside
for Smicer at the edge of the penalty area.
The Czech international controlled the ball before smashing his right-foot
shot against the right-hand post with Weale beaten and Yeovil scrambled the
rebound clear.
Yeovil forced Dudek into another good save from Williams but their world
finally collapsed in the 68th minute when Heskey picked up the ball in the
penalty area and swivelled to fire a 15-yard shot past Weale.
It was a moment of Premiership class which brought a deathly silence to Huish
Park and the atmosphere was even more morose eight minutes later when Rodrigues
brought down Kewell and the referee pointed to the penalty spot.
It was less than Yeovil deserved but Murphy was unconcerned with justice as he
stepped up to tuck the ball past Weale from the spot to give Liverpool a
comfortable cushion.
The dream was dead but the Yeovil party rocked on - and a relieved Houllier
eased into the next round.
Teams
Yeovil: Weale, Lockwood, Skiverton, Rodrigues,
Pluck (Jackson 74), Terry (Lindegaard 38), Way, Johnson,
Crittenden, Gall, Williams, Lindegaard (Gosling 77).
Subs Not Used: Stansfield, Collis.
Liverpool: Dudek, Biscan, Henchoz, Hyypia, Riise,
Diouf (Le Tallec 87), Murphy, Hamann, Smicer (Cheyrou 82),
Kewell, Sinama Pongolle (Heskey 51).
Subs Not Used: Traore, Luzi Bernardi.
Booked: Smicer, Diouf, Le Tallec.
Goals: Heskey 70, Murphy 77 pen.
Att: 9,348
Ref: N Barry (N Lincolnshire).