I know there is still the little matter of lifting the Championship trophy after the game against Bolton this weekend and then a final-day showdown with Hull.
But, promotion and title already securely in the bag, forgive me for already looking ahead excitedly towards next season and what may be in store for Malky Mackay's Cardiff City.
As such, I watched Manchester United's Premier League triumph on Monday night with renewed interest, cheering on every one of Robin van Persie's three goals against Aston Villa.
Not because I wanted United to win the title, I should emphasise, more that I wanted to see Villa beaten and ultimately relegated.
One of my early football memories was of a young, rampaging Andy Gray, complete with mop of curly blond hair, striking terror through opposition defenders as he made his name in the game. What a centre-forward he was before the injury curse struck.
I marvelled when Villa beat Bayern Munich in 1982 to win the European Cup, was delighted for Dean Saunders after he and Dalian Atkinson stunned Sir Alex Ferguson's double winners to help the Clarets lift the League Cup at Wembley in 1994.
But this is about the Bluebirds for me, not Aston Villa, and the truth is I would rather Wigan retain their Premier League status.
Why? Because Cardiff would have a much better chance of finishing above them next season than they would a Villa team who I expect to regroup and come back a much stronger force, whether that be in the Premier or the Championship.
No-one can really predict what will happen in 2013-14 until we know who has signed for whom during the summer transfer window.
There will be the usual suspects filling the top seven spots – Manchester United, Manchester City. Arsenal, Chelsea, Tottenham, Everton and Liverpool.
Then there will be the next batch of teams who won't be strong enough to challenge for Europe, but who will probably be too good to be dragged into a relegation fight.
Villa and Newcastle have tended to be the leaders in this second tier group, followed by Stoke, although for differing reasons this time around they have each found themselves dragged down into trouble.
So too, I guess, will Stoke, the trio probably joined by the likes of West Brom, West Ham and Fulham in terms of mid-table security.
And then we have the final batch of teams, those who will each kick-off the season eyeing a particular points tally which will ensure they aren't relegated and who will pinpoint three others they can finish above.
In this category will be Wigan, should they, not Villa, manage to keep their top-flight status in the coming weeks. You can also expect Norwich, Swansea, Southampton, Sunderland and the promoted trio in the Championship to be in this mix, too.
'Football pundits reckon Cardiff will last at least three seasons in the Premier League – autumn, winter and spring!'
Two of them will be their Championship peers who clinch promotion in the coming weeks. Hull, Watford, Bolton, Nottingham Forest, whoever.
My guess is Norwich will struggle badly in 2013-14, while Southampton and Sunderland will still have a lot of work to do, despite the new manager impetus they have each just been handed.
Swansea should be OK, because they have the goals of the brilliant Michu and the splendid leadership of Michael Laudrup to fall back upon.
But they may well lose skipper Ashley Williams to Liverpool this summer and the huge impact the Wales captain has on the Swans, in terms of leadership and continued excellence on the field of play, will be noticed most when he has gone.
We have seen with Newcastle this season how a capable side can struggle with the extra demands of the Europa League and that is something that could drag the Swans downwards next season.
But there were some pundits who reckoned that Wigan would become a top-10 outfit once Martinez brought in his own men and put his own stamp upon the team.
Cardiff fans should want them to win their battle against the drop in their last five matches and hope that Norwich, currently ensconced in 13th spot, aren't dragged down into the bottom three.
They are each teams the Bluebirds can definitely target for a total of 12 points next season, sides Mackay's men can definitely finish above.
As things stand, any one of Wigan, Villa, Newcastle, Stoke, Sunderland or Norwich could yet join Reading and QPR in losing their top-flight status.
Surely Newcastle, their European rigours over and with the St James' Park factor and Papiss Cisse's goals in their favour, have enough about them to ensure they are not playing Championship football next season.
Stoke had a huge win at QPR at the weekend which will give them an enormous fillip going forward. Paolo Di Canio has reinvigorated Sunderland.
Norwich, for me, have probably punched above their weigh since going up a couple of years ago, but if they can secure one more win from their final four matches they should be OK again.
Talk about fate. As I say, I think that this is a bit of a one-off season for a club of Villa's stature and that under Paul Lambert they will strengthen during the summer, refocus and get it right next time out.
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