This weekend will be two months since Harvey Barnes scored Leicester's fourth against Aston Villa, the last Premier League goal before games were suspended.
It feels like we are edging nearer to the resumption of top-flight football in England with clubs gradually returning to training ahead of a potential restart in mid-June.
Amid the chaos, we take a look at 10 things we have learned over the past week of the ongoing coronavirus shutdown.
Cherish Messi while we can
The sight of Lionel Messi back in training with his Barcelona team-mates on Friday was, surprisingly uplifting.
To see the GOAT back doing what he does best was heartening. At 32 now, there is only so much left of the Argentine on a football field, and we don't want to miss any of it.
There hasn't been much focus on what this break in action will do for sports stars near the end of their playing days, where any uncertainty could be detrimental for the rest of their careers.
When La Liga eventually returns, and when Messi is finally back on the ball in a meaningful contest, we should remember to cherish him while we can.
Football's Coming Home
No, England haven't reached another World Cup semi-final. But the return of Premier League football is edging ever closer.
Manchester United stars have been given compulsory training schedules to follow at home while Melwood has been re-opened for three Liverpool players at a time to train alone.
Strict guidelines are in place to make sure Premier League players maintain high levels of health and safety.
Clubs will implement a raft of protocols designed to protect players and staff from contracting the virus once they return to their respective training grounds for small group training on May 18.
Among the guidelines include a number of transport related rules for employees to follow, one of which is for players to ensure the interior of their vehicles are cleaned on a regular basis.
Germany is the envy of Europe
Get your lederhosen out of the loft, dust off those steins and brush up on your Richard Wagner.
Germany is set to become the envy of Europe with the Bundesliga's return confirmed for next weekend. That's right, live top-level European sport NEXT WEEKEND.
And what a mouthwatering way to kick things off with the fierce Revierderby between Borussia Dortmund and Schalke set to get us underway on May 16.
Many may fear they will miss out on the sporting jamboree, but reports are that BT Sport are considering broadcasting the action on free-to-air TV.
Make sure to spend the next week learning your Leon Baileys from your Serge Gnabrys to impress all your mates down the Zoom chat.
Sport fans will watch anything in a lockdown
Football-starved fans flocked to the BBC Sport website and Twitter in their MILLIONS to catch a glimpse of live sport in South Korea on Friday morning.
A clash between Jeonbuk Motors and Suwon Bluewings would even make hipsters sneer in a normal season, but this is far from a normal season.
Instead the game was trending on social media sites and with viewing figures at 1.8million on Twitter alone, it just goes to show, people will watch anything during a global pandemic and nationwide lockdown.
No-one's neutral in behind closed doors row
The nature of the Premier League's return, however, is still yet to be decided. The bottom six were dead against resuming the season behind closed doors, until the prospect of relegation was taken off the table and it suddenly became a more amenable option.
Aston Villa and Brighton chiefs Christian Purslow and Paul Barber have been particularly outspoken in their opposition this week.
And both have admitted they are guilty of acting in 'self-interest', with Purslow claiming that 'relegation is a £200million catastrophe'.
As Gary Neville said, 'it's getting quite dirty behind the scenes', and those who think there is a quick and easy solution to this could be kidding themselves.
The fallout could have huge ramifications for years to come.
Maybe neutral venues won't be so bad
The game proved a good advert for games behind closed doors.
Crowd noise was pumped into the stadium to try and generate some kind of atmosphere, which made for a much better sound than the echoes of 22 men shouting inside a cavernous bowl.
As much as anything, the fear over neutral venues has been that the lack of home and away supporters in the ground will suck any enjoyment out of the game itself. After all, football without fans is nothing.
But this was nowhere near the doomsday scenario many imagined. There was a semblance of an atmosphere, a red card for a terrible tackle and a 41-year-old scored the only goal of the game. Even without fans, football can still create good stories.