After eclipsing former Liverpool duo Phil Neal and Alan Hansen by clinching his ninth league championship this season, Giggs is out to create another piece of history at Wembley tomorrow.

Victory over Chelsea in the FA Cup final would see the Cardiff-born star become only the fourth player to win the competition five times.

It would be some achievement, especially given the previous three - Arthur Kinnaird, Charles Wollaston and Jimmy Forrest - all completed the feat in the late 19th century.

Typically, Giggs will spend no time reflecting on his magnificent medal haul.

At 33, the Welshman still has plenty of aims left. And his appetite for honours remains unsatisfied.

"I still feel like there is work to be done," he told Inside United, Manchester United's official magazine.

"My immediate reaction is that I want to go on and win it again.

"That doesn't mean I don't want to celebrate, I just don't want to dwell on achievements."

With Gary Neville missing due to an ankle injury, Giggs will have the honour of leading United out tomorrow, the first time he has captained his only professional club in a major final.

And he cannot wait to hear the roar 'champions' cascading down from the United section of the new stadium he graced as a teenager in 1992 when the Red Devils beat Nottingham Forest in the League Cup final, the first of his 16 major medals - a haul which leaves him requiring one more tomorrow to equal Neal's all-time best mark.

Giggs added: "Even after winning the league this season, I just want next year to come.

"I am already looking forward to playing in a season where we are known as champions and everyone refers to us as champions.

"Obviously I am proud of what I have achieved in the game and the trophies and medals that I've won, but there's plenty of time for me to look back on it when I've finished playing.

"I want to look forward rather than look back. Right now I'd rather think about helping the team achieve something else - our next trophy."