It's incredible to think Sevilla have won four UEFA Cup/Europa Leagues and two Copa del Rey titles since 2005.
The La Liga club are also celebrating the bonus of Champions League football next season by beating Dnipro in last night's Europa League final.
Our European football correspondent Graham Hunter joined us on Off The Ball tonight to explain the reason for the Andalusians' sustained success and whether they can keep their run going.
Viva the sporting director
"Let's start with the foundations: Monchi! Ramón 'Monchi' Rodríguez, their football director took over the direction of the club when they were in the Second Division in 2000. He's been in constant control of the buying and selling strategy and coaching hiring since then. They had won four trophies in their entire history when he took over. They immediately got promoted and in 2006 to 2015, they've won eight trophies, four of which are senior European trophies.
"The key thing to point out is this is a fresh side. [Manager] Unai Emery rotates and gets it right. They were pillaged last season. They didn't want to sell Rakitic, they didn't want to sell Fazio and they didn't want to sell Moreno. Buy-out clauses were invoked and therefore it's got to come down to strategy. It has to come down to brilliant, brilliant planning."

Carlos Bacca scored twice last night (Photo by Chris Brunskill Ltd/Getty Images)
Is Carlos Bacca a likely depature?
"He's in play because there is a buy-out clause. That's the reality of Spanish football that someone comes in and pays the buy-out clause which is above €40M now, because it was at €30M before. He's a player who is restless. I know Newcastle have looked very closely at him last summer.
"It's been a record goals season for Bacca. He thought he was a Spurs, Arsenal or Liverpool player after one good year. That might be a view that the scouts of those clubs concur with.
"I don't think he's anxious to go and he renewed [his contract] recently and Sevilla want to keep him. And Monchi's verdict post this win [over Dnipro] is 'we'll sell as few as possible'.
"They want one more year off him but because he's a late developer, there is a double-hit there. It's not simply that he wants to make money quickly, it's the fact that he's getting on in age and he needs to make a move promptly if he's going to get two or three years out of it."
What of the future of highly-rated manager Unai Emery?
"There is an offer from Milan. That's been in the pipeline for weeks and they've been fluttering eyelashes at each other and his stock hasnt' gone down since they started that courting process.
"I know there is a certain degree of anxiety in him that he should go to the Premier League as soon as he can. When he went to [Spartak] Moscow, it didn't work out. He found it an unhappy cultural experience and he was stung by that.
"He's intense, he's talented, he's got brilliant football judgement ... but he's another man in a hurry. Therefore, I think staying is feasible. Champions League with the team you built? Again, feasible.
"If a really big offer came in, would he say 'I've got to take this team to its natural conclusion in the Champions League and I won't take a job at Milan or Borussia Dortmund or wherever it might be?' Then, I think that's a misjudgment. I think there's room for him to say 'I'm going to move while my stock's high.'"