The Heysel disaster of 29 May, 1985, led to the deaths of 39 fans and
a five-year blanket ban on English clubs in European football.
More than 60,000 supporters of Liverpool and Juventus had made their way into
the ageing
Heysel stadium in northwest Brussels, many having spent the day drinking before
the European Cup final.
At around 7pm local time, about an hour before the scheduled kickoff, the
trouble started.

Heysel: a tragedy waiting to happen
Fans had been chanting, waving flags and letting off fireworks, but the
atmosphere became
more violent and a thin line of police was unable to prevent a contingent of
Liverpool followers from
stampeding towards rival fans.
A retaining wall separating the Liverpool followers from Juventus supporters
in sector 'Z' collapsed
under the pressure and many were crushed or trampled when panicking Juventus
fans tried to escape.
Thirty-nine Italian and Belgian fans died and hundreds were injured.

Fans from both sides were
involved in clashes
English banned
The game eventually went ahead late, despite objections from both managers,
and Juventus won the match 1-0 from a second half penalty.
Some Liverpool fans claimed that Juventus supporters precipitated the violence
by hurling stones and other missiles.
Others have blamed poor organisation and lack of crowd control by the Belgian
authorities,
saying that there were insufficient police inside the stadium to prevent fans
from clashing.
UEFA acted swiftly to ban all English clubs indefinitely from participating
in any of the three
European competitions in the wake of the tragedy. This restriction was gradually
lifted five years later.
The Heysel stadium itself has changed beyond recognition since the disaster.
The old venue, built in 1930, was demolished after the disaster and replaced by
the all-seater
Stade Roi Baudouin, which has never been used to stage club football.
'Runaway train'
No plaque commemorates the 1985 horror, and the only reminder of that time is a
reconditioned
gateway near the main entrance, the last remnant of the original stadium.
Gerald McKinley, a Liverpool fan who was at Heysel but not involved in the
rioting, said:
"Heysel was almost certainly going to happen because no one, anywhere, seemed
capable of stopping the violence.
"There was trouble at almost every game, at home and abroad and not just
involving English teams.
It was like trying to stop a runaway train.
"It had to stop somehow and since Heysel, there have been far fewer incidents.
But what a tragic loss of life."