"What we can't let it do is fester because it creates, at times, when things aren't going so well, an atmosphere that none of us want," Hull manager Steve Bruce said. "If we are Hull City Tigers or we are Hull City, whatever we are, we have got to stay together going forward because we need all the help we can get. We are a newly promoted team."
Bruce said he would talk to Allam.
"The chairman has put something like 70 million in," Bruce said. "Without him, there wouldn't be a club or a Hull City. It would be down the tubes, in my opinion. However, I have got to have a conversation with him because I don't think he quite understands what it means in terms of history and tradition."
Angry Hull fans sang "We're Hull City, we'll die when we want" during the Liverpool game as Allam watched on from the director's box with members of his family.
Bernard Noble, the spokesman for Hull City Official Supporters Club, said most fans want to see Allam stay as chairman but back down from his plans to press ahead with the name change.
But Allam's opinion is unlikely to waver. He recently said the word City is "redundant" and "irrelevant", and that he would prove to be a trailblazer for clubs changing their names "to something more interesting".
"City, town, county: these are meaningless," he said. "In marketing, the shorter the name the more powerful - think of Coca-Cola, Twitter, Apple. By next year, I will change the name to Hull Tigers."
- AP