My dreamy wishes say that after the scalpel work - take a very deep breath here - officials have unclipped the machete and chopped all seven South African and Argentine sides from the deal.
That also reduces the travel programme and eliminates the unwieldy time differences on live television coverage out of the republic.
The Sanzaar rulers have agreed the best move is for that collection of sides from South Africa and Argentina to throw in their lot with European competitions and for the international squads to push to join the Six Nations.
They believe that will help the offshore player exodus which has hurt South Africa, in particular, and it will be a much better broadcasting fit.
Organisers have kept all five sides from New Zealand, reduced Australia to four, stayed with the Sunwolves in Japan as part of the commercial strategy towards the next World Cup and opted for the last two sides from the Pacific Islands or Asia.
That arrangement taps into the economic and broadcasting markets in this part of the world where fans will be able to tune into more meaningful contests at acceptable times.
Organisers would return to a round-robin competition and finals to fit into the new time frame recently agreed to by World Rugby before the cream of the talent begin playing test matches in July.
The lure of a sharp, high quality rugby series in the South Pacific-Asia region would reward players and hold them from premature exits chasing the loot in Europe and might encourage some from that part of the world to try their talents Downunder.
If only ... but with the continuing silence there's still hope.