The crushing of spectators had occurred in England previously, dating back to Wembley's opening game in 1923 when 1000 people were injured. Other disasters included many deaths at grounds in Bolton and Glasgow. There had also been a previous problem at Hillsborough when 38 people were injured during an FA Cup semifinal in 1981.
The problems on this tragic April day in 1989 began outside the ground, with insufficient turnstiles operating for the late arrival of fans. The bottleneck was so bad that police officers considered delaying the kickoff, but did not.
Police ordered a Leppings Lane exit gate opened eight minutes before kickoff, enabling about 2000 fans to to flood into the jam-packed central pens behind the goal, with the police and stewards failing to divert some towards the side pens. Shortly after the 3pm kickoff, this dangerous situation was exacerbated as fans pushed even further forward when Liverpool had a strike on goal. It was later found that the compression was so great that many fans died of asphyxia while standing.
Five minutes into the match, ambulance officers began to take note, the police superintendent ran on to the pitch to stop the game, and ambulances were called for. Injured, distressed and angry fans spilled onto the pitch. Some climbed to safety. Rather than relieving the pressure, the police had tried to block fans escaping the crush and even prevented ambulances entering the stadium.
By 4.30, 42 ambulances had taken more than 150 people to two hospitals, but a dreadful tragedy had already unfolded.
The coroner instructed that bodies be placed in a gymnasium until they had been photographed and identified. By the evening, 82 people were declared dead. A further 12 were declared dead in hospital. One man died two days later, and another who suffered severe brain damaged died in 1993.