Tuesday marked the 24th anniversary of Steven Gerrard's first ever goal for Liverpool, which came in a 4-1 win over Sheffield Wednesday way back in 1999.
Gerrard went on to be perhaps the greatest player in Liverpool history, and arguably the best midfielder of all-time in the Premier League, finishing his Reds career in 2015 with 186 goals in 710 games.
The Al-Ettifaq manager was also later named club captain, as well as taking on the armband for the Three Lions.
A box-to-box midfielder for the most part, he was famously capable of playing in almost any position on the field, adept both in defence and attack, and scored some noteworthy goals for the Reds.
However, although it might not have been the Champions League or FA Cup final, Gerrard got off the mark for his boyhood club in typically impressive fashion at Anfield against The Owls.
Picking the ball up on the edge of the centre circle, a teenage Gerrard drove at the Wednesday defence, jinked his way through two defenders, before finishing low into the bottom corner from an acute angle inside the box.
It is surely one of the best first goals ever scored in the Premier League, but how does it compare to the first strikes by Paul Scholes and Frank Lampard - his main rivals to the claim of England's best ever midfielder?
Scholes was the least prolific goal scorer of the three, but he managed to get on the scoresheet twice for the Red Devils in a League Cup clash at Port Vale in 1994 for his first strikes in the iconic red shirt.
His first was a delightful chip over the diving goalkeeper that went in off the back post, before he headed home in the second half to complete a turnaround and make it 2-1.
Lampard - widely regarded as the greatest goal scoring midfielder of all time had a somewhat more agricultural first goal for the Blues.
Leading Levski Sofia 2-0 in the UEFA Cup in 2001, the former West Ham star found himself on the end of a Bolo Zenden cross in the final minute of the game, only for his shot to be saved by the feet of goalkeeper Georgi Petkov.
But fortunately for Lampard, the ball bounced straight back out to him with an open goal to bundle the ball into.
Scholes showed great composure to net his first for United, but Gerrard's strike was undoubtedly the better of the three, having dribbled nearly half the pitch, tricked his way through the defence and still pulled off an impressive finish.
All three were known for scoring in impressive fashion, with Scholes lending his name to a whole generation of youngsters attempting a trademark volley from outside of the box.
Lampard would net 177 in the Premier League, making him the sixth-highest goal scorer in top-flight history, ahead of the likes of Michael Owen, Thierry Henry and Robbie Fowler, and was 57 ahead of the next-most prolific midfielder - Gerrard.
However, the Reds icon perhaps edges the two for the importance of his goals. In 2005 he scored the first of Liverpool's stunning 3-3 comeback against AC Milan in the Champions League final, before twice scoring in the FA Cup final a year later - his second from about 30 yards out on the half volley to equalise in the 91st minute.
While both Scholes and Gerrard would only play for one club in England, Lampard went on to join New York FC in 2014 who loaned him back to Manchester City for a season, before both he and Gerrard made the move to MLS in 2015.