And breathe. Tottenham Hotspur's wait for a Premier League win has come to an end, Roberto De Zerbi's men seeing off bottom side Wolverhampton Wanderers on Saturday afternoon.
December was the last time the Lilywhites had enjoyed that winning feeling, although after a much-improved performance last time out, three points followed this time around at Molineux.
That vital victory didn't come easy, however, with substitute Joao Palhinha scrambling home a winner late on, the visitors making hard work of it up against a team who have already seen their own relegation confirmed.
A win is a win, even if it doesn't move the needle after West Ham United's own triumph against Everton, yet there's still plenty of tweaks for De Zerbi to make if Spurs are to become a truly coherent outfit again.
Kolo Muani experiment needs to end after Wolves
For the third game running, De Zerbi opted to unleash Randal Kolo Muani in something of an unfamiliar right-wing role.
For the third game running, the Frenchman failed to make an impact, this time hooked at the break amid a difficult first-half for Spurs as a whole.
The decision to persist with the on-loan forward - who has still scored just one league goal all season - remains a head-scratching one, having shown little to suggest that he is the answer on that right flank.
Yes, the absence of Mohammed Kudus and Dejan Kulusevski might've forced De Zerbi's hand, although the experiment can carry on no longer, with Kolo Muani quickly fading after an initial bright start at Molineux.
In those 45 minutes, the 27-year-old did rack up 34 touches, yet failed to offer much in the way of attacking thrust, losing the ball on 12 occasions and failing to register a single key pass or successful cross.
He simply isn't providing any sort of service to those in the centre, nor is he proving a handful in his own right, with a swift return to Paris Saint-Germain set to be on the cards this summer.
The end is in sight for his Spurs stay, and the France international might not be the only one.
Spurs star showed why he was Postecoglou's worst signing
In Kolo Muani's defence, he certainly isn't the only forward to have struggled in the post-Harry Kane era at N17, with the lack of a clinical number nine no doubt a key factor in their longstanding slump at Premier League level.
Indeed, the persistent woes of Dominic Solanke have not helped matters, the club's record signing unable to prove a genuine successor to Kane since his arrival back in 2024.
Signed by Ange Postecoglou, the Englishman has scored just 12 league goals since then, only three of which have come in 2025/26, having been routinely hamstrung by injury across the last two seasons.
Of course, no player wishes to be sidelined, but considering the sizeable fee that Postecoglou and co paid for him, Solanke's injury record just isn't up to par, proving so unreliable at a time when Spurs desperately need him to deliver.
The sight of the 28-year-old hobbling off on Saturday afternoon was symptomatic of just how luckless Tottenham have been of late, although even prior to that, he had hardly made an impact in the De Zerbi tenure thus far.
Against the Old Gold, for instance, the ex-Bournemouth striker recorded only 22 touches and failed to register a single shot, still looking a shadow of the player who hit 19 top-flight goals in his final season on the south coast.
As stated above, it might be unfair to judge him too harshly, considering the striker's injury woes, yet the north Londoners simply aren't getting bang for their buck right now.
With Richarlison, involved in the crucial goal late on, itching for a start in his place, it might fall to the former Everton man to bail De Zerbi's side out of trouble.
The Brazilian has previous for helping his team fight their way to safety back on Merseyside, with that the type of figure Spurs need to rely on heading into the final stretch.
As for Solanke, ahead of a summer that needs to spark something of an overhaul, he could well be coming to the end, with a return of just 12 top-flight goals to date ensuring he must be considered the worst signing of Postecoglou's prior tenure.