Eddie Howe is desperate to break new ground as he attempts to guide Newcastle into the Carabao Cup semi-finals.
The Magpies booked their place in the last eight with a hard-fought 1-0 fourth-round victory over Howeâs former club Bournemouth at St Jamesâ Park on Tuesday evening to keep alive their hopes of winning a first domestic trophy since 1955.
Asked about the next hurdle, he said: âIâve been in the quarter-final a couple of times with Bournemouth and never got past the quarter-final stage.
âThey are special games. Now youâre going into the business end of the competition, youâre a couple of big wins away from hopefully an incredible experience.
âBut you can only take it game by game. I donât know who weâre going to play yet, but weâll look forward to the next round when it comes.
âI donât think weâre looking too far ahead. Itâs small steps for us. Weâre into the next round, but now the Premier League takes priority and weâll look forward to the Leicester game, which will be a really tough challenge for us.
âWeâll look at the next round when it comes round in our calendar. Weâll look to see the draw, but weâre delighted to still be in the competition.â
A game Newcastle dominated for long periods without creating the clear-cut chances for which they might have hoped was ultimately settled by Bournemouth skipper Adam Smithâs unfortunate own goal, and Magpies keeper Nick Pope had to be alert to deny Dominic Solanke a late equaliser.
However the margin of victory â their seventh in succession â might have been bigger had Callum Wilsonâs first-half strike not been harshly ruled out for offside in the absence of VAR.
Howe said: âWe didnât have a view of it and I didnât know at half-time. Iâve been a bit critical of VAR. Especially initially, I didnât want to change the fabric of how we play the game.
âBut then you see an incident like that and if it was onside, Iâm a bit disappointed it wasnât in use.â
Opposite number Gary OâNeil was happy with large parts of his sideâs performance on Tyneside, but understandably disappointed with the manner of defeat.
OâNeil, who was without Jefferson Lerma and Marcus Tavernier after a virus swept through the camp, said: âWe came, we gave our best and you go out of the Carabao Cup against a top side that are obviously taking the competition very, very seriously with the team they name and the subs they make.
âNewcastle away in the Carabao Cup with the form theyâre in was never going to be an easy draw and the boys gave a real good account of themselves.
âI ask them to make sure weâre competitive in every game and make sure it looks like us and even though theyâve had a tough week, we were that. We were competitive and in my opinion were unlucky to not take the game further.â