Ahead of their clash in Kiev, look at Liverpool and Real Madrid's five previous meetings in Europe's top competition, including the 1981 final.
These two European giants first clashed in the 1981 European Cup final in Paris, with Liverpool coming out on top there by just a single Alan Kennedy goal.
The Reds actually won their first three games against the Spanish titans, including an Anfield thumping 28 years after their first meeting.
Real returned the favour in style with a fantastic away win in Liverpool and have won the last two encounters heading into their sixth meeting in Saturday's Champions League final in Kiev.
Here's a closer look at the previous meetings between the two sides.
Liverpool were appearing in their third European Cup final in five years having won in 1977 and 78 - and looking to make it five successes in a row for English sides following Nottingham Forest's back-to-back triumphs. Real's European dominance was an increasingly distant memory and they were unable to reclaim the title. Liverpool were the better side and finally made the breakthrough in the 82nd minute through Alan Kennedy, making Bob Paisley the first manager to win the cup three times.
Rafael Benitez enjoyed one of his better nights as Liverpool boss when he masterminded victory at the Bernabeu despite the absence from the starting XI of Steven Gerrard through injury. Yossi Benayoun was the man to benefit and it was he who scored the late winner, heading in Fabio Aurelio's cross.
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If the Bernabeu was good, the return leg at Anfield was a dream for Liverpool, who romped through to the quarter-finals. Fit-again Gerrard scored twice, while former Atletico Madrid striker Fernando Torres was instrumental in a dominant attacking performance and netted the opener, with Andrea Dossena adding a late fourth. But Liverpool's run ended in the last eight at the hands of Chelsea.
The tables were turned when Real visited Anfield five years later as European champions. Liverpool were back in the Champions League after an absence of four seasons and the gulf was clear. Real were three up by half-time through Cristiano Ronaldo and a brace from Karim Benzema and a Liverpool comeback never looked on the cards.
Liverpool boss Brendan Rodgers rested key players like Gerrard and Raheem Sterling, prioritising a league clash with Chelsea, but his makeshift side acquitted themselves well, conceding only one goal, scored by Benzema. The campaign ended in disappointment, though, as Liverpool failed to make it beyond the group stage.