The events of the 4th of October in 2015 remains a distinct memory of Brendan Rodgers.
It was the day that the Northern Irishman was told his services were no longer required after another below par performance which was symbolic of the malaise the club was in at that time.
The current Leicester manager recalled his memories to The Beautiful Game podcast(via the Mirror) of driving home after the 1-1 draw in the Merseyside derby when he got the call.
“There were a few stories but I didn't know a thing. Clearly the decision was (already) made but I wasn't aware of it.
“The first I spoke to the ownership was with Mike Gordon on the drive back home after the game.
"When I arrived at the training ground, I got in the car and I was driving home and I got the call from Mike. That was the first time I knew.
"I thanked them for it, for the experience, I knew where they were coming from and we parted on good terms. We both moved on.
To this day, Rodgers says he has no axe to grind with the club and instead sees his time at the Reds in a positive light.
"I had a wonderful experience.
"The first two years in particular of building towards that run that we had. We then lost one of the real catalysts of the team.
"The third year I found, from a coaching perspective, we weren't doing well then we changed it and went on a run and came back into it.
"But at the end of that season when Aston Villa beat us (in the FA Cup Semi Final,) I think everyone wanted to finally get a trophy and after we lost that we dipped, then of course the last game of the season (6-1 defeat at Stoke) wasn't a true reflection of how we worked."
The tenure of Rodgers is hard to define in a nutshell.
You cannot call it a true disaster because there was some glorious and thrilling football played during that 2013/4 season which came ever so close to ending the title run.
Seeing the likes of Luis Suarez in his pomp destroying defences at will, the exciting development of Raheem Sterling, and the rebirth of Daniel Sturridge and Philippe Coutinho after frustrating spells at their previous clubs are memories that many fans recall with a deal of fondness to this day.
But it most certainly wasn’t a success either with no trophies, a number of insipid performances and some questionable dealings in the transfer market.
Then there were questions about how the departures of Jamie Carragher and Steven Gerrard were handled.
Carragher in particular was a avid student of the game and many felt he was a manager in waiting.
However Rodgers detailed why an offer to be on his coaching staff was not forthcoming.
“It was straight forward.
"I was going in with the intention of asking him to come into my coaching staff rather than the playing side.
“But when I actually met him and joined as manager and met him before we started pre-season, my communication with him seemed more as though he wanted to be on the playing side and still focus on playing.
“If that was the case this wasn't going to be the role for him."
Rodgers used a example of what he had in mind for Carragher.
“A bit like Kolo Toure. You think of what Kolo has done for me.
“I took him to Liverpool, then at Celtic, and when he wasn't sure what he wanted to do I gave him the offer of coming into my technical team and that's what I was looking for in a similar role for Jamie.
“He was right he wanted to continue playing but I didn't sort of see the player-coach combination at that time. But he was absolutely first class for me in my time there.”
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