Jose Mourinho heads into tonight's Europa League final looking to continue his remarkable record on European football's grandest stages.
At the Puskas Arena in Budapest, Hungary, Mourinho and Roma are going for their second straight European title after success in the Europa Conference League last season, with Europa League specialists Sevilla standing in their way of more silverware.
Sevilla have prevailed in the competition four times since the 2013-14 season and are bidding to make it five victories in nine years this evening, though to do so they must end one of the strongest managerial records in the game.
It has been 20 years since one of Mourinho's teams last conceded in a European final, coming all the way back in the 2003 UEFA Cup showpiece, when Celtic's Henrik Larsson scored twice against his Porto side.
Despite Larsson's brace, which pegged them back after goals from Derlei and Dmitri Alenichev opened the scoring, Porto claimed a 3-2 victory at the home of tonight's opponents Sevilla thanks to Derlei's own double.
And in his subsequent European finals as a manager, Mourinho has won all four of them while managing not to concede a single goal.
The first came again with Porto the following season, this time in the even-more prestigious Champions League final.
Monaco were swept aside comfortably in Gelsenkirchen, with goals from Carlos Alberto, Deco and Dmitri Alenichev sealing a 3-0 victory.
After making them European champions, Mourinho left the Portuguese club on the highest of highs before heading to Chelsea that summer and famously announcing himself as the Special One upon arrival.
He failed to guide the Blues to a European final and had to wait until 2010 for his next one, when he won his second Champions League with Inter Milan.
Just like Monaco in Glesenkirchen, Bayern Munich were no match for Mourinho's men as Diego Milito's brace earned his side a 2-0 win at the Bernabeu - his next destination that summer.
Once again after winning the Champions League he was forced to wait considerable time for his next final appearance, having come up short at Real Madrid and in his second spell with Chelsea, despite reaching semi-finals with both.
While he is yet to reach another Champions League final, Mourinho led Manchester United out in a 2017 Europa League decider with Ajax, where goals from Paul Pogba and Henrikh Mkhitaryan secured a routine 2-0 victory and his fourth European title as a manager.
The fifth came last season as Roma edged out a narrow 1-0 win over Feyenoord to claim the Europa Conference League.
After landing his first trophy in five years, Mourinho could not hold back the tears despite the third-rank tournament it came in.
And this evening in Budapest, there will be more joyous scenes if the Special One adds another European crown to his collection.