Andrew Smith was the editor of the Bolton Evening News when Wanderers won at Liverpool on that famous FA Cup night.

Here, he recalls how the newspaper covered the occasion, the origins of the famous phrase "White Hot", and what it was like to be in charge of the paper at a time when the club enjoyed three of their most famous FA Cup wins ever...

Those fabulous White Hot years were the best of my life - not just because we had a giant-killing football team to follow but because I had the pleasure to edit a great newspaper, the Bolton Evening News, to work with the nicest group of people I have ever encountered and to live on the hillside above Horwich among neighbours who have become dear, lifelong friends.

As a Geordie, football ran through my veins. The first seven years of my life were spent in a terraced house within sight and earshot of St.James's Park. I probably heard the roar of 60,000 fans who regularly jammed into the ground to cheer on the likes of Jackie Milburn, but Newcastle were in the Second Division by the time I was allowed to go to my first match in the early Sixties.

Across the Pennines, Bolton Wanderers, like Newcastle, were among the big guns. We will always be grateful that you gave us the likes of Wyn Davies, the first centre forward I worshipped, and later Alan Gowling. There was a bond between the Magpies and the Wanderers that made it easy for me to become a regular and passionate fan of my adopted home town team.

And so to Anfield, in January 1993, a couple of months after I joined the BEN and in the company of my new managing director, who was a Scouser through every sinew of his being. We sat together in a paddock enclosure, the Kop and its opposite terrace being considered far too dangerous for those of mixed allegiance, such as us.

Scousers and Geordies normally enjoy the mutual respect that blossoms in a heritage of hard work, hard play, lavatory humour and football that is not about life or death but is much more important than that, to recall an observation of the great Bill Shankly.

There was no such camaraderie on this night. The new editor saw in a Wanderers victory a hike in circulation and buoyant local business - not to mention the bagging of an aristocratic scalp in revenge for a long run of Mersey triumphs over the Tyne. The new MD had no such interest in the greater good, demanding and expecting nothing less than a mauling of the minnows.

When John McGinlay put the Wanderers ahead I leapt from my seat, thumped my sitting boss on his back and joined in a hearty chant of "Super, Super John, Super John McGinlay." I had become a happy Wanderer, a status that has remained with me to this day. I still check the Bolton scores as eagerly as I do those of the Toon' and my adopted team has given me much more to cheer than my native outfit in recent years!

I'm flattered that the BEN credits me with coining the phrase 'White Hot' for the Front Page headline summarising the Liverpool result and, if I did, it only adds to the swell of emotion that has come to epitomise a glorious era in the history of a very special football club.

When we beat Everton at Goodison Park a year later, I couldn't attend the match but remember being in the office first thing the following morning to lead the team at the BEN in recording yet another historic occasion for the Wanderers. I clearly recall seeing the photograph that mirrored the one used from the Liverpool game, when John McGinley once again led his team-mates over to the BEN photographer to salute the victory, arms aloft. The newsroom was united - it was White Hot 2'.

When the Wanderers despatched Arsenal in extra time at Highbury three weeks later, Super John McGinley had already picked out the BEN photographer and at the final whistle ran half the length of the pitch with fellow scorer Jason McAteer to pose for another classic picture - White Hot 3'. The legend was in the frame.