<P> Juventus and Liverpool were drawn together in the quarter - finals of the 2005 Champions League, their first meeting since Heysel . Before the first leg at Anfield, Liverpool fans held up placards to form a banner saying "amicizia" ("friendship" in Italian). Many of the Juventus fans applauded the gesture, although a significant number chose to turn their backs on it . In the return leg in Turin, Juventus fans displayed banners reading Easy to speak, difficult to pardon: murders and 15 - 4 - 89 . Sheffield . God exists, the latter a reference to the Hillsborough disaster, in which 96 Liverpool fans were killed in a crush . A number of Liverpool fans were attacked in the city by Juventus ultras . </P> <P> British composer Michael Nyman wrote a piece called "Memorial" which was originally part of a larger work of the same name written in 1985 in memory of the Juventus fans who died at Heysel Stadium . </P> <P> On Wednesday 26 May 2010, a permanent plaque was unveiled on the Centenary Stand at Anfield to honour the Juventus fans who died 25 years earlier . This plaque is one of two permanent memorials to be found at Anfield, along with one for the 96 fans killed in the Hillsborough disaster in 1989 . </P> <P> In May 2012, a Heysel Memorial was unveiled in the J - Museum at Turin . There is also a tribute to the disaster's victims in the club's Walk of Fame in front of the Juventus Stadium . Two years later Juventus' officials announced a memorial in the Continassa headquarter . </P>

When was english football clubs banned from europe