Baron came into the Liverpool side for the first time in March 1925 and scored five times in the nine games he played by the end of that season as Liverpool finished fourth. He was only called on ten times the following season and added just a couple more goals to his total. His twentieth and final League match for Liverpool was at Burnden Park, Bolton on New Year's Day, 1927. Baron joined Southend United in Third Division South in March 1927 and played 64 games and scored 42 goals in his five years' stay at the club.
Anfield | Saturday 31 Jan 2026
| Liverpool | Newcastle United | |
|---|---|---|
| 4 | - | 1 |
LFChistory has profiles of all players who have appeared on Liverpool's teamsheet since the 1892/93 season, including players who never made an appearance for the first team, but made the bench at one time or another.
We've got all the results from official games, appearance & goal stats from 1892 to the present, every single line-up and substitutions!
How many games Liverpool have played against a club, the business done between them, our form and which players have been most successful in their encounters. The most complete profile of our opponents you will find anywhere!
"Just look at that grass boys, it's great grass, it's professional grass."
Liverpool is one of those clubs whose history is literally steeped in the emotions of its fans. The club was founded in 1892, and since then, every era has left its own memorable moments: from the first victories at local stadiums to triumphs in the Premier League and European competitions. Thanks to archives and fan websites, even a newcomer can follow the team's journey and understand what makes it unique: the determination of the players, teamwork, and an inimitable atmosphere in the stands.
The history of Liverpool FC has always been built around facts: matches, goals, unbeaten runs, legendary players, and coaching decisions. That is why archival resources like lfchistory.net are of particular value - they preserve the club's memory not through emotions, but through accurate numbers and verified data. However, over the past two decades, the way this history is consumed has changed dramatically.
Liverpool’s story is often told through the huge landmarks, the finals, the title runs, the European nights. Yet the club’s history is really carried by patterns that repeat week after week. A team’s identity shows up in how it reacts to a bad ten minutes, how it protects a lead when legs are heavy, how it stays brave enough to play when the crowd is nervous. Over time those patterns become memories, then memories become history.