Plymouth Argyle and Wayne Rooney. A shock appointment that, just a few years ago, would've made it as a screenshot on the Out of Context Football Manager Twitter feed. But here it was, an opportunity for Rooney, and possibly his last-chance-saloon as a manager.
Following the Birmingham debacle, the former England captain had been out of work for a little over four months but he was in no mood to give up. Speaking via BBC Sport, he outlined his intentions to "bounce back" and that he was a "fighter", determined to rise off the canvas and keep on punching. And what's more - he'd had enough of being sat on the sofa at home, twiddling his thumbs. It was getting "weird".
It came out of the blue, but ahead of the 2024-25 season, Plymouth emerged as Rooney's salvation. Just like Derby back in 2021, Plymouth had survived relegation by the skin of their teeth. Change was needed, Rooney, they felt, was needed, with the 39-year-old reportedly winning a race consisting of as many as 80 candidates to land the job.
Argyle chief executive Andrew Parkinson called it a "perfect match" - time will tell. So how's it been going so far?
When Wayne Rooney walks through the door, whatever level of football you're playing at, you're going to take notice. After a full pre-season with his new manager, midfielder Adam Randell complemented Rooney's tactical awareness, commenting on how "approachable" he found England's second highest-ever goalscorer, despite all his enviable achievements as a player.
Come the start of the season, though, it couldn't have gone much worse.
Plymouth were ripped apart by Sheffield Wednesday, losing 4-0 and being completely played off the park - allowing 31 attempts at their goal attests to that. No one said it was going to be easy.
Since then, results it's fair to say, have been up and down. Of their 15 league matches to date, Argyle have put 16 points on the board - that's four wins, four draws and seven losses. They've only won one of their last five in the league but find themselves outside of the relegation spots and in 18th place - a 1-0 victory over fellow strugglers Portsmouth undoubtedly helping clear some of the doom and gloom.
Not great, it's fair to say, but not a complete disaster either. And Rooney's certainly not lost any of that fire that became synonymous with his playing career - a rage-induced red card during a narrow win over Blackburn proved as much.