We owe Gianluca Vialli a huge debt of gratitude. He had a Cup Winners' Cup final versus Stuttgart to prepare for that week, and still he made a point of telling his team to go out, give their all, and win.
The attitude of a winner.
That Everton team had all the worst attributes of Howard Kendall's mini-midget side from the early 90s - and none of the Beardsleys: tidy, small, generally ineffective, and easily bullied.
This was probably the lowest point of Evertonianism in my 40 years supporting the club. In 1994, we still felt that the last-day survival drama was an aberration - and in some ways it was as we won the cup the following year and had a very good side for 18 months or so. By '98, reality had set in that this was our lot for the forseeable. Walter came in soon afterwards, and after a promising period the rug was soon pulled from him financially and we fell into what was probably the bleakest period in my time as a fan, supporting a team that was utterly joyless. The last Kendall side had some tidy, technical ability, but the end-of-days Walter side (and this dragged on for at least 18 months too long) was an abomination.
Ould fellas like me - I am 48 - always bang on about the classic Everton side of the 1980s, but that Walter team really is the one that puts this summer's renaissance into full perspective. Bar those four ecstatic years under Kendall in the 80s, we really haven't had it so good. This current team appears to have the one ingredient that all intervening teams lacked: fantasy. Even the brief giddy months of the boy Rooney were always put into relief by the fact that the team was dire and that he'd be sold off as soon as he threatened to make us worth watching - which is what happened.
While I am sure the current positivity will collapse around our ears in the coming weeks, just savour the moment. We are genuinely on the rise. We have an ambitious, wealthy board, a world-class manager, and a beautiful, visionary playmaker pulling strings in the same direction. Basically: we are competitive again. That's been the exception rather than the rule over the last four decades.