Liverpool reached the semi-final of the Adobe Women’s FA Cup, with goals galore, local derbies and moments to remember along the way.
Take a look back at how they made it through to the final four.
London Bees 0-6 Liverpool
Six goals from five different scorers saw Liverpool ease into the fifth round proper after entering the competition in the fourth round. Denise O'Sullivan, Mia Enderby, Martha Thomas, Gemma Evans and Alice Bergström all found the back of the net, with O’Sullivan and Thomas marking their Reds debuts with a goal.
O’Sullivan, who completed a permanent switch from North Carolina Courage only the previous day, got the visitors up and running.
It wasn’t long before Enderby added her name to the scoresheet, and Liverpool were 3-0 up by the break after Tottenham Hotspur loanee Thomas got in on the act.
Less than ten minutes after the interval, Evans made it four before Bergström took aim from outside the box to add a fifth. And the Swede bagged a brace when she scored her second from range with a spectacular cross-shot which dipped into the net to cap off a dominant display.
Liverpool 2-1 Everton
A Merseyside derby was on the cards in the fifth round as the two WSL teams went head-to-head at St Helens Stadium and it was Liverpool who secured not only the bragging rights but a place in the last eight.
Enderby, who had to be stretched off through injury after colliding with the Everton goalkeeper and scoring, made it 1-0 with 34 minutes gone.
On the stroke of half time, Beata Olsson doubled the home team’s lead. Ceri Holland’s delivery in from the left was squeezed in by the Swedish international at the near post.
Everton pulled a goal back after Reds stopper Jennifer Falk netted an own goal but Liverpool held on.
Charlton Athletic 0-1 Liverpool
It needed extra time to separate Liverpool and Charlton Athletic in the quarter-final but in the end, Zara Shaw was the hero, sending the Reds through to the semi-final.
Introduced off the bench with 103 minutes on the clock, the substitute scored with five minutes of the additional 30 remaining. The 18 year old got the final touch after a scramble ensued inside the box.
And it was an emotional moment for Shaw, on her first game back after a lengthy spell on the sidelines through an ACL injury.