Finally, some good news for football in this country. After a year of mostly negative headlines - topped off by two extraordinary and costly administrative blunders by New Zealand Football - the game received a major fillip yesterday, with the Wellington Phoenix granted a 10-year extension to their A-League licence.
It's a vital boost. It feels like a new start. Nobody really knows whether Football Federation Australia would have carried out the drastic step of cutting the Phoenix from the league, but that prospect would set the sport back decades in this country.
There are, as ever, some caveats in the conditional deal. Somewhat appropriately, it's set out in a 4-3-3 formation - participation in the next four years is guaranteed, before two further three-year extensions that are contingent on several factors.
The specifics of these "hurdles", as FFA chief executive David Gallop described them, weren't made public but centre around building crowd numbers and increasing revenue streams (read amount of broadcast revenue) that flows into the league from this country.
Sky TV pay a relative pittance for A-League rights, compared with the multi-million dollar deal negotiated in Australia with Fox Sports.