Played 19 games, won 15 and lost only one. Scored a whopping 47 goals and conceded just nine.
Leeds United's home Championship record this season meant Swansea City travelled to Elland Road over the weekend with hope rather than any great expectation.
Yet Alan Sheehan's squad made the long trip home from Yorkshire with a point in their pocket and wind in their sails.
A 96th-minute equaliser guarantees a psychological boost, as does avoiding defeat when facing one of the best sides in the division on their ground.
So Saturday's 2-2 draw at Leeds – and the manner in which it was achieved – should be a fillip for Swansea as they attempt to finish another turbulent season in positive fashion.
The gap to the bottom three now stands at seven points, though that could be cut to five should Derby County beat Preston North End on Wednesday.
Even if the Rams lose, there is work to do before Swansea can begin planning with certainty for another season in the second tier.
Derby, who are 22nd, come to the Swansea.com Stadium this Saturday, before bottom-club Plymouth Argyle follow four days later.
If the Swans could dig out successive home victories, all relegation concerns would surely be eliminated.
Sheehan, meanwhile, would have an impressive points-per-game ratio as Swansea's caretaker boss.
During seven games in charge last season, the Irishman helped Swansea claim 11 points.
This time around, his team claimed seven points in the initial block of five matches after Luke Williams departed in February.
That was enough to convince Swansea to ask Sheehan to remain in charge for the remainder of the season, with the Leeds draw representing a rousing start to the final push in 2024-25.
The fact that Sheehan has been given only a short-term deal indicates that Swansea's new-look hierarchy – led by American owners Brett Cravatt and Jason Cohen, plus director of football Richard Montague – are still weighing up their options when it comes to selecting the club's next permanent head coach.
For Sheehan, who it seems is in the midst of a lengthy audition, more displays like Swansea's courageous effort at Leeds will do the cause no harm.