UEFA has opened disciplinary proceedings against Manchester United and Liverpool following disturbances during Thursday's highly-charged Europa League tie.
The north-west giants' first-ever European meeting ended with Jurgen Klopp's men progressing from the last 16 with a 3-1 aggregate win, completed with a 1-1 draw at Old Trafford.
Thursday's match was not without incident, though, and within 12 hours of the final whistle UEFA has announced numerous charges against both clubs.
A banner with the word 'Murderers' greeted visiting fans, some of whom were involved in scuffles at the end of the game.
Supporters arriving for the last-16 second-leg tie against their arch-rivals were greeted with the offensive message on the outskirts of the city.
It was tied to a sheet on a bridge over the M602 in Salford, just a couple of miles from Old Trafford and a route used by many Merseyside-based supporters heading to the game.
It also contained the date of the Hillsborough disaster, in which 96 Liverpool fans died at the FA Cup semi-final against Nottingham Forest.
In the closing minutes of the game a minor scuffle broke out in the top tier of the East Stand when a handful of Liverpool fans, sat among home supporters, unfurled a club flag - much to the delight of the visiting supporters below them - but stewards moved in swiftly to isolate the group to prevent a further escalation after a few punches were aimed at them by home fans.
This fixture has had bad blood between the two clubs for years and during last week's first leg at Anfield, won 2-0 by the hosts, a number of offensive chants in reference to the Hillsborough tragedy were sung by a large section of the away end.
Midway through the second half at Old Trafford there were two very faint separate 'Murderers' chants from the Stretford End but both died out almost before they had got started.
Last week Manchester United condemned the chants but UEFA took no disciplinary action as no reference was made in the Spanish match officials' reports.
"It has always been the position of Manchester United that chants of this nature, which refer to historical tragedies, have no place in the game and do not reflect the values the club holds," said United's statement on Friday.
"We are in discussion with our fans' groups to seek their support in preventing this type of behaviour in the future."
Greater Manchester Police were alerted to the motorway banner and swiftly took it down.
"Police made aware of offensive banner that was hanging over the M602," GMP said on their Twitter account.
"Officers immediately dispatched and banner now taken down."
Inside Old Trafford stadium before kick-off one banner in the away end bearing the words 'Hang the Roma 4' - in reference to United supporters convicted in 2007 of fighting with police in the Italian capital who subsequently had their jail sentences cut on appeal - was also quickly removed.
Liverpool are also looking into claims youth team player Jordan Williams mocked the Munich air disaster during last night's match.
It's understood the club are aware of the allegations but have not commented publicly.
A tweet sent from the 20-year-old academy graduate's Twitter account, responding to a video of Liverpool fans celebrating inside Old Trafford, depicted an aeroplane emoji and pair of hands clapping.
In 1958 eight United players were among 23 who died in a crash in snowy conditions at Munich Airport and some Liverpool fans have been known to taunt their arch-rivals with a song and aeroplane gestures.
The tweet was quickly deleted and Williams later apologised, claiming his account had been compromised.
"My Twitter has been hacked, I would never put anything like that to offend anyone, sorry about this," he wrote.