There's a generation of Rangers fans who weren't even born the last time the Ibrox side faced Red Star Belgrade.
If that doesn't make Allan McGregor feel old then nothing will.
15 years on from the sides' last meeting in a 2007 Champions League playoff, McGregor looks set to start between the sticks yet again. He'll make his 430th appearance for the Ibrox side.
96 of those have been in Europe; four more, and he'll become the first Rangers player ever to break 100. A quarter-final place this year and he'll likely be given the chance to do just that.
It was only his 14th though when he travelled to Serbia under Walter Smith, in his first full season as the undisputed first-choice keeper.
And while it was Nacho Novo who lapped up all the credit for his late Ibrox strike that ultimately sealed their progress, there's not much debate over who the hero of the second leg was.
Smith, then just at the beginning of his second spell in charge, was typically low-key in his assessment after the 0-0 draw in Belgrade.
"I thought that we team-wise worked very hard," he said after the game that sent them into the Champions League proper.
"It was always an awkward game for us, right from the very start. They looked to get the ball forward early and put our defence under pressure and McGregor and the back four handled it very well."
The man who claimed Rangers were "f****d" last time they drew Red Star in 1990, though, would have taken any performance and result that sent them on their way into European football's top competition.
And he'd have been inwardly buzzing to see McGregor deliver one of his defining early performances in a Rangers jersey to help them get it over the line.
Less than a minute was on the clock when he was off his line in a flash to cover for a Sasa Papac error. The defender had stumbled to allow Igor Burzanovic through on goal but McGregor was on him in a heartbeat to smother his shot and send it out for a corner.
Burzanovic was thwarted twice more on a night that Red Star frequently tested a nervy Rangers defence. So too was Dusan Andjeldovic, who thought he had the coveted equaliser in the net, only for a sprawling McGregor to claw it away in front of a disbelieving home support.
Red Star were growing desperate and when Ognjen Koroman's thunderous 25 yard effort was acrobatically tipped over the bar late on, they knew it wasn't going to be their night.
A fresh-faced, 25-year-old keeper had gotten the better of them, and 15 years and 82 European appearances on, it remains one of his finest performances to this day.
"Allan McGregor might as well retire because he won’t have a better night than this."
That was the verdict from the Daily Mirror's match report on the night, but it's just as well he didn't listen.
Rangers will be hoping they don't need him to the same extent as they look to repeat the feat of 2007 with a Europa League quarter-final spot on the line this time.
They'll be hoping they don't need him. But they'll be equally confident that, if they do, the veteran stopper will do whatever he can to book a last eight spot, and give himself a chance of a 100th European appearance in royal blue.