Manchester City and Chelsea will contest the third all-English final in European Cup history when they meet in the Champions League final on Saturday.
Pep Guardiola is leading City into their first ever final in the competition, while Thomas Tuchel is the third Chelsea boss to reach this stage.
Chelsea, Manchester United, Liverpool and Tottenham have all contested all-English Champions League finals before, yet there wasn't one before 2008.
2008: Manchester United 1-1 (6-5 pens) Chelsea
Avram Grant had guided Chelsea to their first Champions League final after taking over from Jose Mourinho midway through the 2007/08 season.
United, who had won the European Cup twice before, were led by Sir Alex Ferguson, with Cristiano Ronaldo their talisman at the Luzhziki Stadium in Moscow.
The Portuguese star left his mark on the game, opening the scoring with a header. Frank Lampard's equaliser saw the final locked level at the break.
Didier Drogba was sent off for flicking Nemanja Vidic in the face, with John Terry reportedly taking his place in the penalty shoot-out that followed. The captain's slip and Edwin van der Sar's save from Nicolas Anelka are folklore.
2019: Liverpool 2-0 Tottenham
Madrid's Wanda Metrpolitano hosted this final. Liverpool had reached it after a sensational comeback against Barcelona in the semi-finals.
As for Tottenham, Mauricio Pochettino and Lucas Moura had launched their own comeback in the last four against Ajax.
A penalty, given by handball by Moussa Sissoko, was VAR's first intervention in a Champions League final. Mohamed Salah gave Liverpool the lead from the spot.
Divock Origi's goal just a few minutes from time ensured Jurgen Klopp's side were the sixth in Liverpool's history to be champions of Europe.
Also that season, Chelsea and Arsenal contested an all-English Europa League final, with the Blues inspired to victory in Baku by Eden Hazard's double.