It was 30 years ago, but John Higgins remembers it as if it was yesterday.
Two fresh-faced 20-year-olds going head-to-head in an epic quarter-final at the 1996 World Snooker Championship, with the Scot one frame away from defeating England's Ronnie O'Sullivan.
"That is one match that sticks in my mind," said Higgins. "I was 12-11 in front and I remember it as clear as day."
The colours are all on their spots – a regular training programme usually dispatched with ease for a man of his talent. Pot them all and he is in the semi-finals for the first time.
Legendary BBC commentator Ted Lowe, predicting trouble may be ahead in the Crucible cauldron, says: "The butterflies must be floating around his tummy."
Higgins, with perfect memory 30 years on, takes up the story: "I've got an easy clearance with the colours. I normally pot the brown and just play off the side cushion and be above the blue.
"This time I decided just to stun the blue down when you're under a bit of pressure. I was well below the blue. I went round the cushion, went round the angles and landed a very tough rest shot."
Still, Higgins is only two shots from the semi-finals. But the tricky pink is missed, O'Sullivan cleans up, wins the decider and Higgins is out.
In the semi-final, O'Sullivan then lost to Peter Ebdon, who was beaten by Stephen Hendry in the final.