It feels like yesterday that I was stood at the platform of Lime Street Station ready to board a train for London for Jurgen Klopp's first game as Liverpool manager.
It felt like we were about to enter an exciting era following the club. Nobody knew just how long it would last, but we all knew it was going to be some ride.
The experiences over the next nine years will live with me forever. If someone turned to me that morning and predicted what was to come I would have laughed at them.
Inside 48 hours that shook Liverpool as clues dropped and staff left gobsmacked
Alonso doing something amazing - but phenomenal finish proves he's next LFC boss
Not that I didn't believe it was possible, but managers don't stay that long and I felt as though the club were a long way from what they went on to achieve.
A league title, a Champions League, an FA Cup, a League Cup, becoming World Champions, endless early starts and late nights following Liverpool with mates.
It all started at White Hart Lane and it's gone in the blink of an eye.
I was there when Kenny Dalglish returned to the Liverpool dugout at Old Trafford in 2011 and that felt like a huge moment for the fans. The unity was back following Roy Hodgson's abysmal spell as Liverpool manager.
When Jurgen Klopp appeared from the tunnel at White Hart Lane, it had a very similar feeling - but there was something slightly different in the air.
Before Klopp's arrival, the fanbase was disillusioned with what they were seeing on the pitch. It had been less than 18 months since Brendan Rodgers came so close to ending Liverpool's wait for a Premier League title.
But following a dismal 2014-15 season ending in a 6-1 hammering from Stoke City and a poor start to the following term,
Read on liverpoolecho.co.uk