Liverpool's homegrown superstar Trent Alexander-Arnold has showed incredible generosity to his former coach.
The 21-year-old, who started playing for the club at the age of six, certainly hasn't forgotten the man who first scouted him.
Ian Barrigan is the head of pre-Academy recruitment at Liverpool, and spotted the now-England international playing for Country Park in the Walton & Kirkdale League.
Speaking to the club's official website, the youth coach explained how Alexander-Arnold had paid for himself and his son to attend the last two Champions League finals.
Barrigan told: “I was his manager when he was just a baby, and suddenly there we are at Anfield with the Champions League trophy.
“I've been to six European finals following Liverpool but Madrid was proper nerve-wracking. Trent gave me and my son tickets and paid for our flight. After we won, on the day of the parade, Trent came to me and said, 'Let's get a photo.' I was getting all emotional.
“We were at a rooftop bar in town with all the players' families, and all Trent's mates and family were there, and his mum Diane was crying, and I was like, 'If I go over there I'll be the same!' I've known her since Trent was six years of age, she used to collect the subs for the team. Trent used to come to my kids' birthday parties.
“Then at the Club World Cup, when Trent got the ball [before assisting Roberto Firmino's stoppage-time winner in the semi-final against Monterrey], I knew we would score. I just knew."
Barrigan, who has worked for the club since 1997, was also given tickets to the 2018 final by Academy alumni Alexander-Arnold.
He said: “When we went to Kiev and lost to Real Madrid, again he gave me the ticket for it, and, to be honest, I have no bad feelings about it. To get a kid from U6 to the Champions League final is the ultimate, really. When you're walking to the stadium to see one of your kids play in a game like that… it's unbelievable.
“Trent is a lovely kid when you meet him as well, and what's brilliant is he can inspire kids that it can be done, and we've got a manager who supports kids. He knows these kids will run through a brick wall for him.”