Leeds United have enjoyed a dream debut Premier League season under Marcelo Bielsa.
Free-flowing football, big-name scalps and a ninth-place finish; what more could you ask for?
Very little, and with the Whites ending the season as the Premier League's form side, with one defeat in their last 11, any suggestions of a Bielsa 'burnout' have been well and truly eradicated.
Plans are in motion for Leeds to strengthen the squad this summer too. The club have sent out clear signals they will not rest on their laurels, with a focus on quality over quantity.
The club bolstered the group heavily last summer to get a Championship-winning squad to Premier League standard and by fine-tuning a few key positions, they could be set for another successful season.
Building a club from the second-tier to compete at Premier League level is never easy, though there have been several good examples in recent years.
Crystal Palace and Burnley haven't been embroiled in plenty relegation skirmishes over the last five years, whilst Southampton have avoided the drop for nearly a decade after dropping as low as League One.
However, perhaps the greatest example of all is Leicester City, the newly-crowned FA Cup champions.
The Foxes' fan base have had it all. A rise from League One to the Premier League, a dramatic great escape, a fairytale title win, European adventures and now domestic trophy success.
With Brendan Rodgers' side now flooded with foreign imports and ludicrous talents, it's easy to forget Leicester have been in the Premier League for less time than the Saints, for example.
That's by and large down to the infrastructure of the club, laid down by the late Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha and carried forward by his son, Khun Top.
For Leeds, there are similarities in the way Andrea Radrizzani is trying to build the club from the bottom up. The strong recruitment drive to collect the best Under-23s talent, the renovation at Thorp Arch; it shows he is here for the long haul.
Whilst challenging for the Europa League places seems a reasonable and attainable goal for Leeds in the near future, success in cup competitions could equally be welcomed by the Elland Road support.
Leicester's example has shown how a fan base can be brought together by a cup run. The only blot on Bielsa's otherwise perfect copybook at Leeds is that cup-runs have been non-existent.
In the Championship, promotion was the sole aim and rightly so.
Now Leeds are establishing themselves in the Premier League once again, fleshing out their squad in the process, a more meaningful approach to the cups could catapult the club further forward.
The FA Cup defeat to Crawley Town in January saw wholesale changes, with survival still the number one priority. Whilst nothing is taken for granted, you'd be surprised if Leeds were sweating on their top-flight future come the turn of 2022.
That should give Bielsa a little more room to strengthen his cup XI after a hectic post-COVID schedule.
The Premier League will always be Leeds' bread and butter but cup success could be the remedy to soothe a 30-year wait for a major domestic honour.