At 2-0 up in injury time, you'd think it's job done.
When the fourth official's board went up to indicate five added minutes to Swansea City's home clash with Millwall in a game the hosts had dominated, you'd have been excused an early exit to dodge the traffic coming out of Morfa car park.
But this team keep you on the edge of your seats - in both a good and a bad sense - and by the time those five minutes had elapsed, Swansea had somehow snatched a draw from the jaws of victory.
Two own goals rubs salt into wounds that much firmer and deeper and the Sky Sports score graphic doing the rounds on social media on Tuesday night was almost comical.
A fuming head Russell Martin took responsibility after the match, saying he was the man behind the team's mentality.
"For 93 or 94 minutes, we were by far and away the best team," said the head coach. "Dominant, aggressive, everything we got criticised for against Blackburn, and rightly so in a lot of senses, I think the boys put right tonight.
"We should score more goals. Millwall only had one shot on target before two of our defenders score an own goals.
"We should make more of our own chances in the final third. I have to take responsibility for it, I'm in charge of the mentality of the team."
But Martin can't legislate for what happened at 2-1. With the game on an unnecessary knife-edge after Harry Darling put the ball into his own net, a senior Swansea player punched the ball back to a Millwall man on the sidelines and Lions promptly went down the other end, resulting in Nathan Wood heading past Andy Fisher.
"Even though we have so many young men on the pitch, we have to do better than we did," Martin exclaimed.
"The ball goes out for a throw-in, and one of our players not involved punches the ball back on the pitch. I'm absolutely furious about it. I've told him. That just can't happen. He punched the ball back to them to take a throw-in quickly and we concede a goal.
"Whether you're on the bench or whether you're not involved, you need to add value to your team somehow. That's certainly not adding value."
And when asked if it was a younger member of the squad, Martin responded: "No, it wasn’t a young lad. He knows.
“We need to keep control of the game. Let’s start with not giving the ball back to the opposition when it goes out for a throw, because they are the moments in this league where if that’s against us, I am pretty sure it’s getting hit into the stands, it takes a minute to get it back and the game’s done, everyone goes away feeling really good.
“How do we find the answer? We will sit and talk honestly about the problems like we always do. If the penny drops and they really want to impact the league, they have a chance to. We are really close to being very, very good and some moments tonight were very, very good. But we need to eradicate those moments to really have an impact.”
Swansea have often been accused of being naive over the years when it comes to game management, perhaps being too 'nice' on occasions and those labels have been justified at times. Tuesday's night shambolic last five minutes will serve the players and head coach well in the long run. Apportioning blame in these situations is never easy or indeed helpful, and as ever it is usually a little bit of column A mixed with column B.
The result and actions late on in SA1 are doubly frustrating as Swansea were entirely impressive over the course of the regulation 90 minutes. They created so much more than they did against Blackburn Rovers and Oxford United, they were indeed rampant at times and there were a number of positive individual displays to add to a dominant collective performance.
Joe Allen, making his first start in Landore in a Swansea shirt for 10 years, rolled back the years and his composure on the ball was superb. Others, too, showed what they are capable of. That can, however, go to the other end of the scale.
The manner in which Swansea threw away two points will stick in the throat for a while. The shine easily comes off in those circumstances. Managing and seeing out results is part and parcel of the game and those traits will have to be improved. Martin will know that better than anyone.
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