Arsenal take on PSG in one of the most hotly anticipated ties of this year's Champions League group stage, with all eyes set to be on the Emirates Stadium on Tuesday night.
The match is being shown live on Amazon Prime, with an impressive punditry line-up of Frank Lampard, Clarence Seedorf, Daniel Sturridge and Laura Georges set to give their take on the action.
Of course, Lampard lifted the Champions League trophy himself as a player, with a glittering career also seeing him win three Premier League titles, four FA Cups and the Europa League with Chelsea, as well as countless individual awards. The ex-West Ham, Man City and New York City midfielder also won 106 caps for England, playing at three World Cups and scoring 29 goals.
He has had mixed success as a manager since hanging up his boots, leading Derby County to the Championship play-offs in his first season before returning to Stamford Bridge and finishing as FA Cup runners-up. However, he was later sacked by Chelsea and would go on to see a poor spell in charge of Everton also end in dismissal.
Regardless, Lampard still goes down as one of the greatest midfielders of his generation and remains a popular figure in the football world. His personal life still makes headlines too, following his marriage to TV presenter Christine Bleakley nearly a decade ago.
The couple have spoken honestly about life together over the course of their relationship, while Lampard has also opened up about the tragedy that left him acting like a "zombie" during the height of his career. Here are some things you might not know about the Chelsea legend.
Lampard met his future wife, TV presenter Christine Bleakley, at the Pride of Britain Awards in 2009.
Two years later, they got engaged and married in 2015. They now have two children together, five-year-old Patricia and Freddie, two, while the footballer has two other daughters, teenagers Luna and Isla, from his previous relationship with Spanish model Elen Rives.
Together, Frank and Christine - who is known for presenting shows including The One Show and Dancing on Ice - form one of the most popular celebrity couples in the UK, but by their own admission, their relationship got off to an "awkward" start as the TV presenter almost didn't give him the time of day.
"Frank came over to me and said, ‘I watch you on The One Show'," Christine revealed on Loose Women. "I said, ‘No you don’t! Who was my guest last night?’ And he was able to tell me!"
"There was an awkward introduction at the party afterwards," she added. “I just laughed and we both giggled about it. Then that was it. He somehow got my number, and I had a withheld number call my phone on the way home. I picked up and it was him.
"I said ‘Wow, you’re keen!’ as a bit of a joke, and we chatted, and he said he enjoyed meeting me and would like to stay in touch. It was very relaxed."
The TV host added: "Then he went away with England the next day so I didn’t see him for a couple of weeks. But we spoke on the phone every single night while he was away and one night we spoke for four hours.
"So by the time we met again which was a couple of weeks later, we’d done all the awkward chats. I knew straight away it could be serious because I knew we could be mates and he made me laugh and we laughed a lot on the phone. I am very, very glad we met when we did, it was definitely about timing for us."
In April 2008, Lampard suffered a devastating family tragedy when his mother Pat died at the age of 58.
Having been admitted to hospital with pneumonia, she went into intensive care for a "week-long process", but while it looked as though she was improving, she suffered a brain haemorrhage and passed away leaving her family in shock.
The Chelsea star, who was 29 at the time, was left heartbroken by the tragedy and broke down in tears on the pitch just days later as he scored to send the Blues through to the Champions League final for the first time. He went on to dedicate many of his career successes to his mum, who he described as his "best friend".
Years on, he is still dealing with his grief and admitted he was "a zombie" for the months that followed, knowing he was "not right".
"That is the one time I have been challenged to the extreme with mental health," he told the Diary of a CEO podcast last year. "I was a mummy's boy growing up. I had a reliance on her and when I got older I'd panic like, 'What if mum wasn't there?'
"I was 29, it was very sudden, I was in a hotel we used to stay at pre-game, we were playing Wigan in the evening. I got a call from my sister telling me she'd fallen ill and going to hospital."
"Mum was getting a bit better, then we got a call saying she'd passed away, she'd had a brain haemorrhage," he continued. "Just as she was getting better, everyone was excited, she passed away there and then, so it was like the biggest devastation. Years later, I realise that this happens to so many other people and when you're a young man who hadn't really lost anyone, you don't have that real feeling of what that is."
Lampard went on to say that his mum was "everything" to him and, on reflection, wonders if he should have walked away from football following the tragedy.
"I lost the person who was the closest person to me, everything to me. I'll never forget the feeling in my stomach," he said. "If I talk about it I get it instantly again. I lost what was my best friend, the person who gave me all of that kind of emotional stuff and warmth. The sudden feeling of someone's not going to be with you, it doesn't compare to anything when you're that close.
"If I look back I think, 'Maybe I should've come out of [football], life is bigger than that' but it was probably a tiny coping mechanism for me. We played a game against Liverpool, the second leg, and I scored a penalty, we'd won the game and now we're getting sent to the Champions League final.
"I remember sitting in the dressing room afterwards and I had this almighty sense of fatigue, body and mental fatigue," Lampard added. "I went home and opened a beer, couldn't even drink it and went to bed, and everything came out of me then, it was like a week or two full-blast of this complete pain."
The former Everton manager also said that he has kept voice notes of his mum on his phone, while he regrets not taking more videos of her when she was alive. He went on to say that he was glad he met Christine when he did, as he was "not right" following his mother's death.
"I've still got her number in my phone and still got a couple of voice note things," he said. "We were never a family who took videos and stuff, and I wish we were.
"The only thing is my mum's sister is Sandra Redknapp, Harry Redknapp's wife, and every time I speak to Sandra, I hear my mum. They look very similar, they sound very similar and in the first period it was painful but now it's kind of nice because that's a memory for me.
"The feeling of grief, it catches up with me now and again many years later," he added. "I think I probably had a year where I was single, drinking a little bit but I was playing fantastic football, I had a really good year of football, it was weird. Then I met Christine and thank God she came along around at that time because I was a little bit not right."
One year to the day after his mother's death, Lampard was involved in a live radio row with LBC talkshow host James O'Brien as he defended himself against accusations that he was a bad father.
His former partner, Elen Rives, had told a newspaper that the footballer was "heartless" and accused him of making them move to a small flat while he enjoyed a bachelor lifestyle in their old house. After his sister alerted him to the fact that the claims were being discussed live on the radio, Lampard phoned in to defend himself and accused O'Brien of insulting him.
"I find it insulting that you're telling me you would fight tooth and nail and insinuating that I wouldn't fight tooth and nail," he said as he fought back against the claims. "You don't know anything about me and you're insinuating I'm weak and scum because I haven't fought tooth and nail.
"What I'd like you to do in future is think when it becomes the personal issues, about people's families, about people's kids, and you're degrading them as human beings. Sometimes you should think about things before you speak about them because you are speaking about personal people now. Next time I'll speak to you man to man, forget the radio show, I'll speak to you man to man about that."
He added: "Unfortunately I have to live this in the public eye. Now someone has approached my ex-girlfriend, pretending to be friendly, caught her at a moment where she is a little bit drunk and down or whatever and got a load of stuff out of her.
"Someone has conned her basically. She has been conned. And by being conned and then [it] comes out as a pure quote like she has sold her story. She gave her story away in a moment of weakness."