Jurgen Klopp, the Liverpool manager, says he is sure his club's fans will respect the tributes to the late Queen Elizabeth II as English football prepares to resume competition following the sovereign's death.
Liverpool have formally requested to Uefa that a minute's silence be held before the Champions League group tie with Ajax at Anfield, to be played on Tuesday evening.
Supporters of the Merseyside club have booed the national anthem during Wembley occasions, most recently in last year's two domestic cups, prompting questions to Klopp about how the stadium might respond tomorrow.
Klopp said he has experienced many occasions when Anfield has stood in silence during moments of remembrance.
"It is the right thing to do but I don't think our people need any kind of advice from me for showing respect," said Klopp.
"There are plenty of examples where people showed exactly the right respect, one which surprised me - and I was really proud of that moment - was last season when we played Manchester United around a very sad situation with Cristiano Ronaldo's family. And that is what I expect. For me, it is clear that's what we have to do. That's it."
Klopp suffered bereavement last year when his mother passed away and said grief brings with it empathy for those going through the same sadness.
"I am 55 years old and she is the only Queen of England I ever knew," said Klopp.
"I don't know her, but the things you can see are that she was a really warm, nice, loved lady and that is all that I need to know. Because of my personal experience not too long ago [I know] it is obviously not about what I think but what people who are much closer to her felt. I respect their grief a lot and that is why I will show my respect tomorrow night with the minute's silence if it goes through."
As a club, Liverpool are aware there will be attention on Anfield because of a large section of their crowd's reaction during recent finals, although the circumstances are not comparable.
Many Liverpool supporters have jeered the national anthem for four decades, the reaction symptomatic of the grievances the club's fans have held against establishment figures going back to the late 1970s and, most particularly in the 1980s. Attitudes hardened after the cover-up of the Hillsborough disaster in 1989 in which 97 Liverpool supporters were unlawfully killed.
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