Harry Kane says scoring the decisive goal for England to knock Germany out of Euro 2020 at Wembley is a moment he will never forget.
It is a moment England fans up and down the country have been longing for over generations - and one that arrived at the national stadium in the round of 16 on Tuesday night.
Gareth Southgate's Three Lions went into the clash unbeaten and having not conceded, but knew they would face their sternest test against an always-dangerous German outfit.
But second-half goals from Raheem Sterling and Kane - the Tottenham striker's first after a below-par tournament prior to that - sealed a 2-0 win and a quarter-final date with Ukraine.
"It's an amazing day, an amazing game," Kane told the BBC after the game. "To hear Wembley like this, it was a moment we’ll never forget and a great performance. 2-0 another clean sheet but a perfect afternoon.
"We’ll enjoy this one but we have another important game on Saturday."
Kane has struggled throughout this tournament and was similarly quiet early on against Germany, missing a good opportunity on the stroke of half-time - and then looked in some real pain when he clashed knees with Mats Hummels early in the second half to leave him on the deck.
But the Spurs star picked himself up and later stooped to head home substitute Jack Grealish's cross with just four minutes left to send Wembley into raptures.
On the painful-looking knock to his knee, Kane allayed any injuries fear despite his admission it was a "massive blow".
He said: "Massive, I took a massive blow to the knee but I just knew I had to give it a couple of minutes.
"I’ve always said as a striker you’ve just got to be ready for the next chance and Jack’s put in a great cross and I put it in.
"Obviously, every striker wants to put it in the back of the net, it’s nice to score my first and will hopefully score some more."
With England's side of the draw looking favourable - they play Ukraine next in Rome and a win means they would play Denmark or Czech Republic for a place in the final - Kane had a warning for defences coming up against the Three Lions.
"If you look at our attacking players and not just myself, teams will be looking at us and know that we’re dangerous," he said.
"Of course we want to score goals and we’re keeping clean sheets. So we’re building self-belief going forward, we can’t switch off as we obviously want to go all the way.
"The bottom line is we don’t want to stop here. We have a vision of where we want to go and we’re not done yet.
"We loved it [against Germany] and hopefully we will back again for the semi-final and final."