The day Dirk Kuyt wrote his name in Anfield folklore and Suarez proved he could nutmeg a mermaid
It stands as one of the rare high points of Liverpool's 2010-11 season, a campaign which started with promises of a bright new era under Roy Hodgson and finished with one of Liverpool's favourite sons back in the dugout.
Kenny Dalglish, as it happened, celebrated his 60th birthday a couple of days before his Reds side defeated Manchester United 3-1 on March 6, 2011.
It was a game notable for Dirk Kuyt scoring the first hat-trick in the fixture since Peter Beardsley in 1990, and for a virtuoso performance from new Liverpool signing Luis Suarez, who tormented a United side which would, as tended to be the case in those days, end the season as Premier League champions.
Liverpool, by contrast, would finish sixth,
Here, GOAL takes a look at what happened next for that 2011, United-slaying team…
Getty ImagesGK: Pepe Reina
Always a popular figure at Anfield, Reina made 394 appearances for Liverpool and his record of 177 clean sheets place him third on the club’s all-time list.
A member of the Spain squad which dominated international football between 2008 and 2012, he left for Bayern Munich in 2014 having lost his place to Simon Mignolet and therefore spent the previous year on loan at Napoli.
He’s still playing now, joining Villarreal – the club he had initially left to sign for Liverpool in 2005 – after the expiry of his contract at Lazio.
Oh, and he also appeared, memorably, on Spain's version of last year.
AdvertisementGetty ImagesRB: Glen Johnson
Signed by Rafa Benitez as “the missing piece” after Liverpool narrowly missed out on the Premier League title in 2008-09, Johnson instead became one of the few reliable presences in a side which swiftly declined.
He eventually left Anfield for Stoke in 2015 having made exactly 200 appearances for the Reds. His career fizzled out as injuries hit him hard, and by the age of 33 he had played his last professional game.
These days, he’s a regular on the UK media circuit.
Getty ImagesCB: Martin Skrtel
Slovakian centre-back who made more than 320 appearances for Liverpool after joining from Zenit in 2008.
Skrtel eventually left Anfield in 2016, moving to Fenerbahce. He later joined Atalanta and Istanbul Basaksehir, and was still playing until the end of last season with Spartak Trnava before he announced his retirement from the game due to injury issues.
GettyCB: Jamie Carragher
The ultimate one-club man, Carragher sits second on Liverpool’s all-time appearance list, having turned out 737 times for the Reds across a 17-year playing career.
He retired in 2013 having won nine major honours, and while most expected him to pursue a career in coaching, he has instead established himself as one of the most insightful, passionate and popular media pundits around, forming a famous and unlikely partnership with Gary Neville on in the process.