Suddenly those predictions of a Australia v England Commonwealth Games final don't seem so fanciful.
The English Roses 49-45 Quad Series defeat of the Silver Ferns last night has given world netball a shake-up as crunch time in the four-year cycle approaches.
England have long been talked up as a potential threat to the world netball's established order, but that chatter has got louder this season with Netball Australia seemingly taking on the role as the Roses' hype girls.
They reason because England has several athletes playing, and in the cases of Geva Mentor, Serena Guthrie and Jo Harten starring, in the Australian league that the Roses will soon be challenging for the top spot in world netball. (That the England Netball has had a $30 million cash injection from a lotteries grant, $5.3m of which is directed to the national programme is, apparently, immaterial).
Ironically, what makes England a real threat at next year's Commonwealth Games is that their players won't be playing in the Australian league in the lead-up. With the Gold Coast tournament kicking off in April next year, the start of the Australian competition has been pushed back to May. This will afford English coach Tracey Neville a luxury that her predecessors haven't tended to have since the introduction of the now defunct transtasman league - time together as a unit.