Trending News: Fraudsters use late broadcaster’s profile in scam
Trending News: Why Tesla, crypto and prisons are Trump trade winners
Trending News: ‘Oasis and Stone Roses played on our tiny stage’
Trending News: Cape Town’s Day Zero: Axing Trees to Save Water
Two months ago, Josh Woods was sitting in the Kop at Anfield cheering Liverpool to a Champions League win over Bayer Leverkusen and singing You’ll Never Walk Alone.
Accrington Stanley’s 24-year-old forward is a Liverpool fan who grew up idolising Steven Gerrard and Fernando Torres.
He still watches them whenever he can but on Saturday, thanks to the FA Cup, he will get to share a pitch with his boyhood team.
Woods will step out at Anfield with League Two Accrington when they take on the Premier League leaders in the third round.
He was in the Liverpool end at Wembley to see the Reds beat Chelsea in the 2022 FA Cup final before returning to the national stadium when the two teams met in Carabao Cup final last February.
Despite another Liverpool win, his trip to Wembley 11 months ago turned sour as he missed all the action because of problems getting into the ground., external
There will be no access issues this weekend.
Woods is expected to feature for the team 19th in League Two against the team six points clear at the top of the Premier League.
“When I go and watch Liverpool I always think to myself, ‘I’d love to play at Anfield one day’,” he tells BBC Sport.
“Now it’s about to happen. Dreams do come true.”
Accrington Stanley, who are they?
Woods’ love of Liverpool is partly down to his dad, Dale, who used to be a steward at Anfield, while brother Connor, 26, was once part of Liverpool’s academy and now plays for Warrington Town in National League North.
Saturday will not be the first time Woods, who was brought up in Skelmersdale, west Lancashire, has stepped foot on Liverpool’s pitch.
He remembers the time he was chased off the Anfield playing surface after watching his brother play an academy game.
“I was only five, I jumped over the wall and ran on,” he laughs. “I was just running around in circles. My mum and dad were screaming at me to get off.”
Around the same time he had his picture taken with the Champions League trophy soon after Rafael Benitez’s Liverpool overcame AC Milan in a dramatic 2005 final.
Woods also recalls meeting Ian Rush, Liverpool’s record scorer with 346 goals, when he was growing up.
“I was with my mum in Liverpool and got a picture with him,” he says.
Rush’s name featured in an iconic 1980s television milk advert featuring two young Liverpool fans.
One tells the other that Rush had told him that if he didn’t drink milk, he would only be good enough to play for Accrington Stanley, who were in the Northern Premier League when the advert first aired.
The other fan asks, “Accrington Stanley, who are they?”, to which the first replies, “Exactly.”
“Yes, I’ve seen it,” says Woods about the advert. “It’s funny because each time I mention to someone I play for Accrington Stanley, they always bring that advert up.”
We are not gonna make spamming
© 2025 All Rights Reserved
BACK TO TOP
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!