Olivia Smith has already made history.
The 21-year-old has a legacy before she steps out in front of Emirates Stadium's crowd for the first time on Saturday as the first £1m women's footballer.
Arsenal broke the world record to sign her from Liverpool in July and, although it has since been surpassed, she will forever be the women's game's first seven-figure player.
"Everything was leading to this. She was born for this," her former Penn State University head coach Erica Dambach told BBC Sport.
"Yes, it's happened young, but it hasn't happened without years of preparation to get into this environment.
"Sometimes when it happens to young players, it comes on quickly and maybe they've got six months to deal with the emotions and the media training. Liv has been experiencing this stuff since she was 15 years old."
It was at that age she made her debut for Canada - the youngest player to appear for Les Rogues - so the scrutiny and bubbling pressure that will come after signing for the European champions will not be an alien experience for Smith.