Kilmarnock's 5-1 weekend thumping at the hands of St Mirren has set a few alarm bells ringing in Ayrshire.
A team who started the season going close to playing in the Conference League after a superb fourth-place finish last term has slipped to 10th in the Scottish Premiership with seven games of the season to play.
Derek McInnes' side are just one point above the relegation play-off spot and six from the bottom, the same distance to seventh-place St Mirren above them.
A poor season after a strong one is not an unusual phenomenon in Scottish football outside the big Glasgow two.
Aberdeen, Heart of Midlothian, Dundee United and others in recent years have toiled the campaign after qualifying for Europe as early season qualifiers take their toll.
But that in itself is not the sole reason. So what has gone wrong at Rugby Park?
Stark downturn in performance
There is no simple or clean answer to that straightforward question, but the downturn has been stark.
Killie had accrued an impressive 51 points by the time the league split last year, but the best they can hope for after 33 games this term is 38 points.
Their success last term was built on solid foundations at the back and an excellent home record.
McInnes' men kept 14 clean sheets and conceded the fourth fewest goals in the Premiership while winning 10 games at Rugby Park and losing just four against Ross County, Celtic, Rangers and Hearts.
Only the best the league had to offer could come away from Ayrshire with points and both Old Firm sides left with nothing in matches last year.
Those foundations have started to crack this term, though.
Kilmarnock have already conceded nine more goals than they did in the whole of last term, keeping just six clean sheets so far.
At home, they have won six of 15 games, while their away form, which has been a struggle in the last three campaigns, has worsened with just two league wins.
The 5-1 loss in Paisley encapsulated the difference as a squad that was resilient, physically up for the battle and attuned to the conditions last term turned in a limp and fragile display in the howling rain.
"Every goal that was scored was avoidable from a defensive point of view," former Kilmarnock striker and Hearts head coach Steven Naismith said on Sportscene.
"If you look at the expected goals for, both teams had 1.6. That tells you a lot about Kilmarnock's defensive performance.
"Going into the bottom six, this game needs to be a wake up call. They need to make sure the home form is on point until the end of the season."
Goalkeeping conundrum & injuries take toll
Centre-back Stuart Findlay's absence is potentially a big reason why Kilmarnock have struggled more defensively this season.
The 29-year-old only made his return from injury as a late substitute at the weekend, having been missing since the end of October.
He played every minute in all but one league game last season and was a colossus.
McInnes will hope his comeback can shore up the backline for the run in.
Goalkeeper has also been an issue. Kieran O'Hara and Robby McCrorie have shared duties this season, with the former having the worst save percentage in the league, while the latter ranks 10th among keepers to have played at least 10 games.
It also ...