Liverpool captain Jordan Henderson shared an emotional embrace with his father on the pitch in Madrid following his side's victory in the Champions League final.
Henderson lifted the trophy after Liverpool's 2-0 win against Tottenham, which was secured courtesy of a penalty from Mohamed Salah and a strike from Divock Origi.
After the game Henderson made sure to spend time with his father Brian, who was diagnosed with throat cancer in 2013.
While he was receiving treatment, Henderson's father asked his son not to see him.
Speaking last year, Henderson said: 'I didn't see my dad much in that time. Very little. He wouldn't let me. Brendan (Rodgers) was very good. He said I could go back home whenever I wanted to see him, so I saw him just before he went in for his first treatment.
'Then I would see him again a few weeks later and it wasn't too bad but, towards the end, it got to a point where he didn't want to see me at all because of how he was.
'He didn't want me to see him like that so I knew it was pretty bad. I was in regular contact but the only thing I could really do was try and perform on a weekend and luckily enough at the time, we started winning every week.'
Henderson played the whole game against Tottenham as Liverpool won the Champions League for the sixth time and their first trophy under Jurgen Klopp.
The victory saw Liverpool bounce back from the disappointment that they suffered in last year's final, when they were beaten 3-1 by Real Madrid in Kiev.
Henderson's father recalled that when his son was ten he told him that he would play in a Champions League final one day.
As reported by The Liverpool Echo, Brian Henderson said: 'When he was 10 I took him to see a Champions League final at Manchester United between the two Milans (it should be Mianl vs Juventus) and he said to us, when they came out to the Champions League music, he said dad I'm going to play there one day.
'He's done it not once, but twice. And he's won one. I'm absolutely delighted for him.
'I think if he hadn't picked that trophy up today he would have had a bad, bad summer. But now he'll have a fantastic summer with the children.'