Pasukan kegemaranku....LEVERPOOL
This
article is about Liverpool players with at least 100 appearances. For
Liverpool players with between 25 and 99 appearances, see List of Liverpool F.C. players (25–99 appearances). For Liverpool players with fewer than 25 appearances, see List of Liverpool F.C. players (fewer than 25 appearances).

Jamie Carragher has the most appearances in Europe as well as the most amongst current players
Liverpool's record appearance-maker is Ian Callaghan, who made 857 appearances between 1958 and 1978. Jamie Carragher has made the second most appearances with 737. Eight other players have made more than 600 appearances for the club, every one of them being part of at least one European Cup winning team. Ian Rush is the club's record goalscorer; he scored 346 goals in his 16 years at Liverpool. Rush is the only player to score more than 300 goals for Liverpool; only three other players have score more than 200 goals for the club.
In 2006, a list of 100 players, known as "100 Players who Shook the Kop" was compiled by LFC TV as the result of a fan survey: "Over 110,000 supporters all nominated their own personal Top 10 players in order of impact made".[1] Kenny Dalglish finished top of the list, with Steven Gerrard second and Ian Rush third. The highest-placed "overseas player" on the list was Danish midfielder Jan Mølby, at 16th.[2]
Players
- Appearances and goals are for first-team competitive matches only, including Premier League, The Football League, FA Cup, Football League Cup, FA Charity/Community Shield, European Cup/UEFA Champions League, UEFA Cup, UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, UEFA Super Cup and FIFA Club World Cup matches; wartime matches are regarded as unofficial and are excluded, as are matches from the abandoned 1939–40 season.
- Players are listed according to the date of their first team début for the club.
- Positions are listed according to the tactical formations that were employed at the time. Thus the change in the names of defensive and midfield reflects the tactical evolution that occurred from the 1960s onwards.
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