Six months into his role as Bayern Munich manager, Vincent Kompany's side are eight points clear at the top of the Bundesliga and on course to regain the title they relinquished to Bayer Leverkusen last season.
The 38-year-old coach was brought in after Bayern ended the 2023-24 season 18 points off the top spot in third under Thomas Tuchel - their worst league finish since 2010-11.
Kompany became the Bundesliga's first black manager and only the second black manager in any of Germany's professional football leagues.
However, he is not the first in his family to make history as a black pioneer. Kompany's father, Pierre, arrived in Belgium in 1975 as a refugee from what is now the Democratic Republic of Congo and went on to be elected as the country's first black mayor when he topped the poll for municipality of Ganshoren in Brussels, in 2018.
Troy Townsend, former head of development for Kick It Out, says he and others are "galvanised by the potential for success" of Kompany who, he believes, will "pave the way" for others.
In a Football Daily special on BBC Radio 5 Live, presenter Eli Mengem explores what has made Kompany into the man he is today and how the Belgian has become a trailblazer for black coaches.
Former Anderlecht manager Hugo Broos was the man who gave Kompany his senior team debut aged 17, when he selected the defender to play in a Champions League second qualifying round tie against AFC Rapid Bucuresti.
The 72-year-old says the youngster "had no fear".
"We were immediately convinced we had a great player," he says.
Kompany was one of a golden generation of Belgian footballers, alongside the likes of Eden Hazard, Kevin de Bruyne, Thibaut Courtois, Jan Vertonghen and Romelu Lukaku.
Broos, who won three European trophies with Anderlecht and currently manages the South African national team, adds: "Vincent was even a little bit higher than all those guys."
After winning the Belgian championship twice in three seasons with Anderlecht, Kompany was courted by big Premier League clubs including Sir Alex Ferguson's Manchester United and Jose Mourinho's Chelsea.
However, in 2006, aged 21, he opted instead to join German side Hamburg for a then club-record fee of about £7m.
He endured a tough start in the Bundesliga, picking up an injury straight away while the club got into a relegation battle. It was also during his time in Germany that his mother passed away and sister got cancer.
As the podcast explores, Kompany's mother Jocelyne, who worked as a trade unionist, was an influential figure, helping to instil the socially conscious values that he exhibited during his time at City, when he worked with Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham to help tackle homelessness.
Kompany has previously said that his difficult spell at Hamburg taught him to, "stay humble on the way up".
"That was maybe the best step he ever could make. Discipline. At that moment, he needed that. That was a good thing," says Broos.
"That changed him a little bit and it was maybe that change that he needed to become the player he became."
In 11 years at Manchester City between 2008 and 2019, eight of which were spent as club captain, Kompany won four Premier League titles, two FA Cups and four League Cups and is widely regarded as one of the top-flight's best-ever defenders.
"We won the league and went out to the local pub, the Railway in Hale," says former City team-mate Kyle Walker.
"He's got a pint of Guinness and everyone's following us around. He stood up and he did a speech. He loves talking. But to do that, and bring not just the lads together, but the fans who were joining that moment with us, that was powerful for me."
After working as head coach at his boyhood club Anderlecht, Kompany earned plaudits for bringing Burnley back to the Premier League in 2022-23 by playing an impressive brand of attacking, possession-based football.
During his season in the Premier League, Kompany was one of only two black managers in the English top flight - alongside Nottingham Forest manager Nuno Espirito Santo.
Walker remembers his former captain taking his coaching badges and says it was clear that Kompany was inspired by manager Pep Guardiola.
"You could see that he wanted to do something, taking little bits and bobs off of Pep," he says.
However, the coach's lack of pragmatism and failure to bend from his approach even when results were bad was criticised when Burnley were relegated in their first season back in the top flight.
So how did that lead him to Bayern?
German football journalist Seb Stafford-Bloor says it is over-simplistic to claim he has, "failed upwards" by taking the job in Munich.
He compares Kompany's appointment to Jurgen Klopp being hired by Borussia Dortmund in 2008, having led Mainz to relegation from the Bundesliga the previous season.
Stafford-Bloor believes Kompany was hired partly because he was willing to accept the reality of the German giants' management structure, unlike Tuchel, where sporting director Max Eberl oversees transfers.
Following that experience, Stafford-Bloor says the club were looking for "an employee" who would be comfortable being "the next man in that chain".
Beyond Kompany's willingness to work within a hierarchy, however, Stafford-Bloor also believes his stature among younger players at the club was an important consideration.
"These guys grew up with Vincent Kompany winning Premier League titles and probably using him on Fifa," he says.
Now, having become the first black manager to work in the Bundesliga, Kompany is on course to make more history by winning it.
Anti-racism campaigner Townsend says that black managers have to work "twice as hard" for opportunities, but believes that Kompany has long been seen as a leader.
"He was spoken about as leadership material a long time before he went into management," says Townsend. "Vincent was made a captain and everyone could see the material that came out of him that made him a captain.
"So he gets spoken about with a lot of positives - the leadership, being able to marshal, words that can take you to the next level.
"I'm not saying Vincent is not talented, because he is a wonderfully talented man. But a lot of players who played higher up the field - wide players, forward players, deep 10 positions - are not spoken about in that way.
"They don't have the same reference as they do with their white counterparts. I often wonder why. It's often used as 'power and pace', and 'the fast one'. Negative stereotypes that have existed for such a long time."
Townsend says, however, that Kompany is "dispelling those myths".
"He has been a trailblazer a lot of his life, a lot of his career," he adds. "[He} may be a trailblazer for a new breed of black managers who can take not just the Premier League by storm but Europe by storm. Being the first in the Bundesliga, that is a massive statement.
"I don't even see a lot of black assistant managers in play at the moment, right across Europe. So, we are almost galvanised by the potential of success of the young manager, early in his managerial journey, which will then pave the way and open doors for others.
"I am sure Vincent would know that, he is a very meticulous guy. He'll know his heritage and know how important it will be for the next breed of black and brown managers that he is successful."