Drew McIntyre can do what no Brit has ever done before by becoming a WWE world heavyweight champion at WrestleMania 36 tonight.
The 34-year-old Scot faces Brock Lesnar for the WWE Championship on the second evening of the American company's annual extravaganza.
If he wins the main event against 'The Beast', the 6ft 5in powerhouse from Ayr - real name Andrew Galloway - will go down in pro wrestling history.
His career is already the stuff of legend, as he was picked out as a future world champion by Vince McMahon in 2009, only to leave the company in 2014 without fulfilling that potential.
Yet he wowed fans on the independent scene and after re-signing with the promotion in 2017, he won the Royal Rumble match this January to earn a shot at immortality.
McIntyre achieving his dream would of course be a special moment for him to cherish, but also poignant for his peers and loyal fans in his native Scotland.
Mirror Sport spoke to Martin Smith, a writer for the acclaimed wrestling website Snapmare Necks, who has covered much of McIntyre's career north of the border, to find out why.
"What would it mean for Drew to win the title? In short, it means everything. For Scottish wrestling. For a man who has made it his life's work to be the very best wrestler on the planet.
"This might not be the WrestleMania main event Drew has dreamed of since he was old enough to have aspirations, but he has made it the dance.

"WWE planned for 70-80,000 fans seeing this event and this match was already destined for top billing. That is a sign of the faith anyone who matters has in Drew and surely this main event will be the first of many for the towering inferno of offence that Drew has become in the ring.
"One thing WWE have with Drew is a unique insight into how he functions as the top guy in a wrestling company.
"His time on the independent scene after his 2014 WWE release was a title laden spell that not only showed the company what they were missing in Drew as a talent, but what they had missed in Drew as a potential figurehead.

"The role he played in his home company ICW's rise to prominence is proof - if needed - that he has the ability to galvanise interest in a company through storytelling, as his feuds with Jack Jester and Grado respectively led to 1,400 and 4,000 sell outs in advance, with only Drew's match announced. People needed to see if those stories would get the ending they deserved.
"As convincing with a microphone in his hand as he is when he's throwing those hands at a foe with precision and malice, there is not a thing a wrestler is 'supposed' to have that Drew lacks.
"Despite the lack of an audience due to an unprecedented global crisis, Brock Lesnar is the perfect opponent to highlight Drew's arrival as a top guy on a global stage.
"Scotland is a country with one of the most vibrant wrestling scenes in the world considering its small population. Drew being the superstar he is has driven the growth of wrestling in the country for the better part of 18 years.
"Even when the scene was nothing, when he first broke through, he brought professionalism and undoubted legitimacy to any match he was involved in.
"The passion he showed when he was released by WWE and returned to the independents helped a scene that was already flourishing go to the next level.

"Everyone had to raise their game and that legacy will be a lasting one, as the country now produces top quality talent on a regular basis.
"On a personal level, Drew has always been incredibly nice, first messaging me over five years ago about my ICW reviews, and he has since been an absolute gentleman in any interaction we've had - giving me hours of his time for an interview for my website, while he was on the road last year.
"He marries a pure natural talent with hour after hour of hard graft, and seeing that graft come to fruition with him standing over Lesnar as the WWE Champion would be a landmark moment for Scottish wrestling.
"Even if it doesn't happen now, and tonight isn't the night, it would be a travesty if the momentum Drew carried pre coronavirus lockdown did not eventually propel him to the mountaintop of pro wrestling.
"He'll have an army behind him when he eventually does."
WrestleMania 36 is The Only WrestleMania Too Big For Just One Night.
You can watch on April 4 AND April 5 from midnight on the WWE Network, which costs £9.99 a month and includes a library of WWE content on demand, or get a free 30-day trial.
You can follow all the action as it happens in the Mirror Sport WWE WrestleMania 36 Live Blog.