Ahead of the next landmark in his fledgling career as a manager, his first time in charge for a Champions League match, the full range of memories have come flooding back for Frank Lampard.
The Miracle in Munich will top the lengthy list of good ones, the May night in 2012 when Lampard captained Chelsea as they won club football’s biggest trophy for the first time.
Understandably, Lampard appeared visibly moved as he recalled the occasion yesterday. ‘A very emotional night on a personal level,’ he said. ‘I didn’t need an extra bond with the Chelsea fans and the club, but what happened on that night and with the fans in the stadium, on such a huge game for the club, it is something that kicked everything on about how I feel about this club.
‘That is maybe the magic of the Champions League.
‘I will be proud to manage in the Champions League for the first time. I had multiple incredible nights in the Champions League, and some bad ones, but it is the ultimate in club football for me.
‘There is something about nights at Stamford Bridge, something about the Champions League music and I want to experience it on this side of the fence.
‘I will be proud to take the team out, of course. But what matters is the result, what matters is starting the group well against tough opposition. I am excited.’
Having played 105 Champions League games, Lampard has plenty of wisdom to pass on to his players, some of whom will be making their debuts in the competition.
The need for even greater levels of concentration and focus will be emphasised in his pre-match meeting.
He says that he hopes his team will ‘blossom in the Champions League as we go along’. Regardless of any inexperience, goalkeeper Kepa Arrizabalaga said: ‘We’ve been waiting for this a long time.
‘We spent all of last year trying to qualify. We are very enthusiastic. We’re going to play with energy, to push and we’re going to try to attack the opposition.’
Valencia are a club in turmoil, following the sacking of manager Marcelino Garcia Toral last week.
Their players are staging a silent protest as a result, boycotting media duties. They were hammered 5-2 by Barcelona on Saturday.
But, perhaps recalling his time as a Chelsea player, a wary Lampard said: ‘My experience of moments like this is that when there is an issue as a collective group of a team against the media, the outside world, generally it makes a group tighter as players.
‘Sometimes it can be a positive as much as a negative on the pitch.’