The Dream of Champions League is still alive for Nottingham Forest. Their victory at West Ham, thanks to goals from Morgan Gibbs-White and Nikola Milenkovic, keeps the pressure on their top five rivals and puts an exciting confrontation on the last day with Chelsea.
Forest has secured European football for the first time in 30 years, but the question remains about how illustrious will be next season's competition. After this, the Champions League, the Europa League and the Conference League are all on the table.
Boy, it was tense. Jarrod Bowen's Late Volley for West Ham has set up a hectic, frayed finish and it needed a stop-time save from Matz Sels from Niclas Fullkrug to secure the victory for the side of Nuno Espirito Santo.
This victory means that although they still need their rivals to slide away, the victory over Chelsea on the last day can protect Champions League football.
It would never be more than nervy. They have been nervous for a while now, Forest, this group of players who have performed at the height of their capacities and beyond for so many of the season, but have been renting since then to see their ambitions of Champions League glide through their fingers.
That Twitchiness could be seen early in the London Stadium. Forest needed the fingertips of Matz Sels to tip Tomas Soucek's header over the bar less than two minutes in the game before Jean-Clair Todibo Wide Wide Wide from the resulting corner of James Ward-Prowsse.
Even Vladimir Coufal, who has never scored for the hammers and will leave this summer, has forced a rescue with an early effort.
However, nerves are easily arranged, but when your opponent gives you the lead and it was West Ham that was compulsory when Alphonse Areola spent the ball directly to Morgan Gibbs-White, who had previously stored a bright volley to tap into an empty net.
Gibbs-White burdened on the corner flag and held up a shirt with the name of Taiwo Awoniyi on the back of the shirt, in solidarity with their teammate who recovers after urgent operation on a rusted intestine, after collision with the post against Leicester.
Before the kick-off, the players of Forest were warmed up in t-shirts with 'Awoniyi 9' at the back and 'We are all with your Taiwo' at the front.
There were similar scenes halfway through the first half when Jarrod Bowen also first seemed to have clattered in the postal head after he had challenged the ball on the line and needed medical help before he walked away with a cut above his eye.
It was assistant referee Sian Massey-elis who postponed her offside flag against leicester who ended in Awoniyi who sustained his serious injury, which led to calls to that controversial edict to change, and there were similar muttering about frustration around the London Stadium when Wood brought away.
However, that frustration was nothing, in the winding delay that forest fans had to tolerate to find out if Milenkovic had doubled the visit of the visitors when the defender flashed just after the hour in the free kick of Anthony Elaanga.
Officials spent six minutes to decide that his teammate Nicolas Dominguez was in an offside position but did not get involved in the game. Referee Sam Barrott called both managers to inquire that the new semi-automated person was not available and that there were problems with the communication between the VAR and the officials on the field.
Once given, this meant that Elanga had granted his 11th assist to the competition campaign to join Bryan Roy as the forest player with the most in one Premier League season.
And yet it was still a twitchy finish for forest. Out of the blue, replacement Lucas Paqueta shifted a ball to the rear pole to and Bowen ended it in style with a nice touch to bring the ball down from behind his body and to be in the net. Play.
Eleven minutes of the stopping time did little left to illuminate the tension, because Fullkrug Sels forced into action and a late Fracas saw the referee waving a swarm of yellow cards.
Forest can finally breathe, although next Sunday will probably be more out of breath.