Sunday's Carabao Cup final gifted Liverpool with the first silverware of the season as Chelsea missed out in the Wembley clash. It also led to more audible booing of the national anthem.
Liverpool's association with the anthem dates back over 40 years and opportunities to show discontent for the song is usually met with criticism from opposition supporters.
Sunday was no different as 'God Saves the King' was played out on the speakers inside the home of English football and boos were heard from pockets of Red supporters in the ground.
Onlookers may believe that Liverpool fans have a problem with the royal family and want to separate themselves from being associated with the monarchy, however, the real reason relates to the city's grievances with the government.
The long-standing disdain Liverpool supporters hold is focused on the establishment and everything that it stands for, while the National Anthem is used as a symbol of their distrust.
In the 1980s former conservative Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was secretly pushed to put Liverpool into a stage of 'managed decline' after the Toxteth riots.
Official papers show Thatcher was advised 'not to overcommit scarce resources to Liverpool' at a time when the nation was going through transition and the city still holds a grudge over their treatment since then.
Parts of the typically left-leaning Liverpool still believe they are overlooked by the current conservative government and the national anthem is used to as a basis to vent frustration.
Fans inside Anfield previously held banners and posters up after King Charles III was coronated as king in 2023.
As a city, Liverpool has seen some of its most famous faces receive individual accolades from the Royal Family at Buckingham Palace.
Legendary Reds manager Sir Kenny Dalglish was given his honorary title in 2018 for services to football having previously been appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire in 1985.
Original Beatles member Sir Paul McCartney was previously given his knighthood by the late Queen Elizabeth II.
Both occasions were celebrated by the city of Liverpool and the club as Dalglish was made a knight.
Liverpool supporters booed and jeered as the national anthem got underway at Wembley and future performances can expect the same treatment.