“I wouldn’t say it’s the best header that I have ever scored, but it’s certainly the most important."
Anybody who knows the history of Glasgow City in Europe would know exactly what goal former forward Sue Lappin is talking about.
Of course, it is her match-winning header against Swiss outfit FC Zurich which sent the club through to the UEFA Champions League quarter-finals for the first time back in 2014.
And ahead of our Round of 16 Europa Cup clash with Sporting CP at the Peasy on Wednesday night - which you can buy your tickets for here - we spoke to Sue about being a Last-16-history-maker during her time with the club.
We begin by casting our minds back to that night at the Excelsior Stadium in Airdrie. With City kicking the game off 2-1 down on aggregate from the first leg, a job needed to be done.
And it would certainly not be plain sailing. A game, which Sue describes as "back and forth", saw City claim a 4-2 win on the night, with those goals coming in the 80th minute, scored by Jo Love, and Sue's 87th-minute winner.
The feeling afterwards? Unlike anything Sue had experienced before or since. A decade later, she still struggles to find the words which reflects the history of what her and her then teammates had made.
“It’s a feeling that if you could bottle it up, you would," she said. "Just to experience it time and time again, especially in front of your family and friends, knowing the significance of what we had achieved for the very first time. It was massive.
“I still get goosebumps even when I speak about it now. It was just pure adrenaline at that moment in time. It was a mix of relief, excitement, happiness, and joy.
“We knew when we scored that it was late in the game and all we had to do was hang on. The rest of the game probably felt like it went on for 20 minutes, but it was only five or six.
“We were just kicking the ball anywhere, to be honest! Just to run down the time.
“I scored a lot of goals for Glasgow City – the majority of which I probably can’t remember, but that one... I don’t think I’ll ever forget it."
It is one she will never forget because it is an experience she continues to relive through her five-year-old daughter.
"It’s one of the only goals I can find quite easily on YouTube and make her watch it again and again," Sue adds. “She always asks if it’s me because it’s not the best quality.
"But when I start to run away after the goal, she knows it’s me because I’ve got quite a distinct running style!
“She likes watching it and that’s really nice for me. It was a huge part of my life and was probably the best moment in my football career.”
For Sue, that night and those memories made were not just for those involved in the pitch.
When you commit to playing football at the level she did, so do those around you. The sacrifices family and friends make - the special occasions missed and the lifts to training and games up and down the country - all become worth it after moments like reaching the Last Eight of Europe's biggest stage.
“Other than the goal, I'd want to relive just the aftermath and the scenes at the end," she said. "Everybody realising what we’d done. Looking up to your friends and family in the stand and seeing how proud they were.
“That win wasn’t just for us.
“My mum passed away in 2011, but she drove me – I say drove me, she took me on buses here there and everything because she didn’t drive – to where I needed to be for football. That win was for her.
“My sister and partner were in the stands. It was looking at them and realising that it was for them, as well.
“You go through life sacrificing time with them and big events in their life because football was what mattered to you. So, to give that back to them and share that moment with them is something I would want to experience again from that night.”
If there was any regret Sue had from that night, it would be that she did not appreciate the magnitude of what they had achieved enough.
With the landscape of women's football back then seeing Sue and her teammates were back at work the next day - with some of her colleagues "not even knowing I played Champions League the night before" - it meant things moved fast. A quick turnaround to the next game.
As such, her biggest bit of advice to the current crop of City players would be to enjoy the experience on Wednesday night. No matter the result, appreciate the occasion you've earned to play in.
"First of all, go and enjoy it," Sue said. "Take everything in.
“You’re taught to treat it like a normal game, and there is an element of truth to that in terms of how you prepare and how focused you are, but you have to still try and take in the moment.
“Stay out on the pitch after the game as long as you want. Don’t rush back into your normal routine.
“I know that’s easy for me to say sitting here now, I retired when I was 28 – not long after the Zurich game – so a long time ago now, but I know moments like these don’t come around too often in football. Go out there and try soak everything in.”