Daniel Ek has been linked with an Arsenal takeover.
According to ITV News, an official announcement of a £1.8bn takeover attempt of the north London club could be launched 'within days'.
Last Friday during Arsenal's home defeat by Everton in the Premier League, Ek, a Swedish billionaire and the co-founder of the music streaming device Spotify - declared his interest in buying the club from Stan Kroenke.
"As a kid growing up, I’ve cheered for @Arsenal as long as I can remember," Ek wrote on Twitter. "If KSE would like to sell Arsenal I'd be happy to throw my hat in the ring."
And his bid to do so appears to be gathering momentum.
Interestingly, The Telegraph have reported that Arsenal's all-time leading scorer Thierry Henry, along with club legends Dennis Bergkamp and Patrick Vieira, could now be involved in Ek's possible takeover bid.
With that said, it's clear that Ek's dream is to own Arsenal.
But it seems one Gunners supporter, amazingly, predicted this would happen almost five years ago.
As seen in the image below, @CalcioCreations uploaded a fantasy Arsenal kit concept in August 2016 that had Spotify as the club's sponsor.
Now if Ek's dream of buying Arsenal becomes a reality, one would assume that he would look to replicate the kit idea.
However, Jens Lehmann has warned that any prospective Arsenal takeover involving his former teammates needs to get the structure of the club right.
"It would be fantastic to have my former teammates working for Arsenal again because they're all great guys," he told Sky Sports.
"But I don't know if the Kroenke family actually wants to sell Arsenal. From my encounters with Josh Kroenke, he's a very nice guy and he was very interested to lead Arsenal to a brighter future.
"My experience of football, now I'm on the board at Hertha Berlin, is people first need to know the right questions and then implement a structure where all the guys - Thierry, Dennis and Patrick - can work.
"There's Edu, a former team-mate, I think he's doing a good job there. So if on top comes Thierry as a coach or manager probably, Patrick the same. Dennis was an assistant coach at Ajax."