Deadline day is done and dusted, meaning the January transfer window has slammed shut.
Across the Premier League, all 20 clubs are reflecting on a hectic month which saw Liverpool splash out £50million on Luis Diaz and Philippe Coutinho return to English football with Aston Villa.
On top of that, Newcastle United were able to splash the cash for the first time since their Saudi Arabian-backed takeover, bringing in five signings and spending almost £100million, while Antonio Conte finally got some faces through the door at Tottenham.
On the flip side however, for Manchester United and Arsenal the month was more about departures then arrivals.
With that in mind, here are Mirror Football's winners and losers from window.
Join the debate! Who won the January transfer window? Comment your winner below.
Winner: Donny van de Beek
At long last, Donny Van de Beek has found a new club and escaped his Manchester United nightmare.
The Dutch midfielder, 24, has joined Everton on loan for the rest of the season and becomes Frank Lampard's first signing.
Van de Beek will be keen to prove himself in the Premier League and put himself in United's next manager's plans.... or perhaps earn a permanent switch to Goodison Park if he remains unwanted in Manchester.
"Now I can say I am an Everton player, I am really happy and can’t wait to help the team," Van de Beek told Evertontv.
"I think it is a great club… there are really good players here and I came because I want to help them go up the table.
"I hope to bring my football qualities, my passing, and, of course, scoring goals. It is a big part of my game to score and give assists and I will try to do that again. And it is not only offensive, you have to defend as a midfielder and I can do that as well."
Loser: Mikel Arteta
Much like at Old Trafford, Arsenal's remit was to ship out players this month, but Arteta will have at least expected one senior signing.
After being linked to midfield trio Arthur Melo, Bruno Guimaraes and Douglas Luiz, the Gunners ended up with no reinforcements in that area and, perhaps more importantly, no new striker either
Although Arteta will be glad to see the back of Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang after he joined Barcelona, the fact Arsenal are now reliant on two strikers who out of contract at the end of the season is not a good look for the club.
Winner: Newcastle United
After being linked to a frankly bonkers amount of players and facing countless rejections, Eddie Howe will be chuffed with Newcastle's business.
Although the Magpies have had to pay a premium, the signings Kieran Trippier, Chris Wood, Dan Burn and Matt Targett showed sense to their approach, while Guimaraes was a sensational acquisition from Lyon.
Survival is still a long way away but Howe and co look firm favourites to beat the drop after the necessary investment. Now they must do the business out on the field.
Loser: Jesse Lingard
One man who was heavily linked to Newcastle and was keen on joining the Toon Army was Lingard, only to be blocked by Manchester United on deadline day.
The 29-year-old is desperate to make England's squad for the World Cup later this year but remains stuck at Old Trafford and out of favour.
Lingard's career has slumped to a low ebb after such a promising turnaround this time last year when he starred during his temporary stint at West Ham.
Winner: Aston Villa
Where to start with Villa's window?
From looking rudderless under Dean Smith in November, the Birmingham club are now looking upwards under Steven Gerrard.
The Villans added Coutinho and Lucas Digne to their ranks - both players who strengthen their first XI - while they supplemented the squad with the signings of Robin Olsen and Calum Chambers.
Could they now challenge for the Europa League places? Don't bet against it.
Loser: West Ham
One team certainly in need of investment was David Moyes' West Ham but fans can't be satisfied with Callum Marshall's arrival from Linfield for an undisclosed fee.
Moyes will now head into the Europa League knockout stages and Premier League run-in with one recognised striker, Michail Antonio.
The Irons pushed hard on deadline day but failed to make any moves happen and, ultimately, it's going to cost them in the race for Champions League spots.
Winner: Jurgen Klopp
Heading into January, Liverpool fans were fairly concerned about the clubs business, or lack thereof.
But, after a frustrating summer in which they signed just one player and spent just one third of what United, Arsenal and Manchester City did, the Reds' owners got their wallets out, with a potential £50million heading to Porto and Diaz coming the other way.
Although, Fabio Carvalho's deal fell through on deadline day after a deal was struck, Klopp will be pleased that incoming sporting director Julian Ward's credentials appear to have been proven, with Ward having taken the lead in getting the Diaz done, just as Spurs had made their interest known...
Loser: Antonio Conte
For a manager who will fancy himself an qual to any member of the elite, Conte simply does not have a team capable of competing at the very top and he'll have been dismayed to see Diaz turn down a Tottenham approach in favour of the Reds.
It mirrored Adam Traore's decision to snub Spurs for Barcelona, leaving the Italian boss without his two tops targets.
Nevertheless, Tottenham's January ended on a sweet note by getting Dele Alli Tanguy Ndombele out of the door, while bringing in Juventus duo Dejan Kulusevski and Rodrigo Bentacur, who managing director Fabio Paratici took to Turin during his time there.
Winner: Christian Eriksen
In arguably the month's most moving story, Eriksen is back in football after joining Brentford only seven months after suffering cardiac arrest for Denmark at Euro 2020.
The former Tottenham star will no doubt receive a warm reception back in the Premier League, with every fan remembering the harrowing scenes back in June which, thankfully, proved not to be fatal.
Loser: Dean Henderson
Henderson is a confident young man and has made no secret of his desire to be Manchester United and England No.1.
But his chances of being called up by Gareth Southgate for the World Cup took another blow, just like Lingard.
Rangnick's desire to keep the 24-year-old goalkeeper at Old Trafford has scuppered his stagnating career further, having sat firmly on the bench this season thanks to David De Gea's supreme form.
Watching Van de Beek and Anthony Martial walk out the door to guaranteed game-time, Henderson's dreaming of being England No.1 looks a pipe dream at this point.