Per Mertesacker has become a cult hero at Arsenal and is determined to give the fans he has such an affinity with a trophy to celebrate this weekend.
While the likes of Park Chu-young and Andre Santos flopped, Mertesacker recovered from a difficult first season in north London to establish himself as a key member of the side.
That defensive quality alongside his manner has seen the 29-year-old embraced by Gunners fans, whose chants of 'Big F****** German' will no doubt echo around Wembley when Arsenal take on Hull in the FA Cup final on Saturday.
"I was frightened at the start because the 'F' word, you can't say that on telly or somewhere else," he said of the chant that is done to the tune of The Sandpipers' Guantanamera.
"It was always a bit weird. A German journalist told me 'they quite like you'. My first impression on that was not good but finally I got it."
Mertesacker has now embraced the nickname - so much so that he is using it for good, selling BFG T-shirts to raise money for his charity, which supports socially disadvantaged children in Hannover by encouraging them to take up sport.
"It worked really well, we just keep on going with that to try to raise some money for my foundation," he said of the Per-Mertesacker-Stiftung.
"It is a good thing together with my chant. Credit to the fans."
That support helped Mertesacker overcome his difficult start to life in England and still gees him on now.
Speaking of the fans, the German, in his understated way said "it looks like we like each other" and wants to reward them at Wembley this weekend.
"It would mean a lot, that would be a big step for our team as well," he said. "We went through a lot of difficulties.
"We were top of the league, then we dropped points and then came back to fourth position. We want to keep our run now.
"We won five consecutive games, we want to continue with that (on) Saturday. That is really important. It looks like we are back on track. We have to keep our focus."
Mertesacker will be cheered on at Wembley by friends and family, including brother Timo who bears a striking resemblance to the defender and has a penchant for going on Arsenal away trips.
"He does it just to improve his English and get on with away fans," he said. "It's a good experience to get.
"He just loves it and, when he has time, he comes over just for away games.
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