As Chelsea offer John Terry a one-year deal, we look at the defender and captain's Premier League career in numbers...
Terry's contract expires this summer and he was set to endure a frustrating finish to his time at Stamford Bridge after a red card against Sunderland ruled him out of the Blues' final two games of the season.
But Chelsea confirmed on Friday afternoon their club captain had been offered an extension and was considering the proposal.
Terry is Chelsea's longest-serving player having made his Premier League debut a few weeks after his 18th birthday as a substitute in a 2-0 win over Southampton in December 1998.
The tough-tackling central defender became a regular starter during the 2000/01 campaign, and he went on to make 483 Premier League appearances over the course of 18 seasons, winning the title four times between 2005 and 2015.
A whopping total of 467 of his appearances have come as starts, with just 16 coming from the bench, and his disciplinary record stands at 68 bookings and six red cards - including his dismissal against Sunderland.
Only 13 players have played more Premier League games than Terry, while only Ryan Giggs, Jamie Carragher, Steven Gerrard and Paul Scholes have made more appearances for a single club.
Terry also holds the record for Premier League goals scored by a defender with 40. His total puts him ahead of the likes of David Unsworth, Ian Harte and Leighton Baines, and it is even more impressive considering his goals have come from open play rather than penalties or free-kicks.
The Chelsea legend's last goal came in their 3-3 draw with Everton in January, and he has now found the net in each of the Blues' last 16 seasons.
Only Giggs, Frank Lampard and Scholes have recorded more Premier League wins than Terry, whose total of 303 Premier League victories gives him a career win percentage of 63 per cent.
He has played under 10 different managers at Stamford Bridge, and in 2014/15 he became one of only two outfield players in Premier League history to have played every minute of a title-winning season after ex-Manchester United defender Gary Pallister in 1992/93 and 1994/95.
A sending-off at the Stadium of Light would have been a sad note to finish on but whatever Terry's decision, his place in Premier League history is already assured.