Surrounded by 87,192 jubilant fans belting out Sweet Caroline, you could feel the pure joy at Wembley Stadium after England's women clinched a 2-1 victory over Germany.
Chloe Kelly sparked joyous scenes as she scored the second goal in extra time that turned England's Lionesses into European Champions.
Under the floodlights, surrounded by her hard-working team, coach Sarina Wiegman looked emotional at the historic win after a thrilling 120-minutes.
It was exactly what the talented coach needed - after sadly losing her sister in the build-up to the tournament.
She dedicated the huge win to her sibling while speaking to the press after - and was seen kissing a bracelet on her wrist after the final whistle.
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"I'm kissing this little armband [bracelet] it was my sister's and she passed away during the build-up to the tournament," Wiegman told journalists after.
"I think she was here, she was in the crossbar. She would have been here, she would have been really proud of me and I am proud of her too."
Wiegman travelled back to Holland for a week during the warmup camps for the tournament after her sister's death to grieve with her family.
In the tournament, the close-knit team united behind their head coach, by sporting black armbands for their match against Belgium.
At the time, she said her players' decision to wear the armbands was a reflection of them.
"They came to me and asked me if they could do the gesture and I think my sister would be proud."
"It shows they are great human beings and the togetherness of the team," she added. "I think my sister is proud of them."
Football-mad Wiegman has told how she had to play in a boy's team when she was younger - alongside her twin brother, and cut her hair short to fit in.
Aged 11, she started a girl's team alongside her sister who recently passed away, and was playing for the Holland senior team by age 16.
She became the first Dutchwoman to win 100 caps and played 104 times before her country - all while working full-time as a PE teacher.
She accepted a full-time role as head coach of Den Haag in the Eredivisie Vrouwen as a semi-professional - after rejecting a part-time role.
In 2014, she as working with the national team as an assistant manager, before coaching at Sparta Rotterdam, a men's professional team, while undertaking her Uefa Pro Licence, the Times reports.
Dutch Wiegman, 52, was appointed in 2020 but continued as Holland Women's manager for a stretch, with her first match as England coach a 2023 World Cup qualifier in September 2021.
She was appointed on a four-year-deal, replacing Phil Neville at the end of his contract in July 2021.
In an interview a few years ago, she said: "Later on, I sometimes wondered if my parents weren't worried about that," she said in an interview with the Dutch novelist Anna Enquist for Volkskrant a few years ago.
"I mean, they perhaps thought I'd rather be a boy. But it wasn't like that. When I had to run an errand and the butcher addressed me as "young man" I got angry. "I'm a girl!" I'd say.'
She previously said she would not move full-time to England after taking over, in favour of splitting her time between England and her homeland.
At the time, she said: "We'll figure out if that's going to work and if I can bring the quality I need to bring."