Super Rugby begins in a month. Kick-off in February always felt a month too soon and that sense is not helped by the hangover from last season's troubles when the complicated format was given the red card.
The tournament has downsized to 15 teams across three conferences but with the action halting for June internationals, the champion will not be crowned until August.
The hope is that there will be much stronger rivalry throughout the series with particular heat coming on the Australian sides. They had an appalling 0-25 round-robin tally against the NZ teams, ructions about culling the Force and rising concerns about the quality of administration across the game before Raelene Castle replaced Bill Pulver as chief executive.
Rejigging the competition has brought its scheduling issues and after the series starts with a February 17 round in South Africa, the Highlanders and Blues open the New Zealand challenge a week later.
There is then a wait until round seven in the last weekend of March before the first of the transtasman clashes between the Rebels and the Hurricanes in Melbourne. That will be a test on many fronts with former Force coach Dave Wessels switching to coach the Rebels who will take on one of the favoured Kiwi sides.