With two-thirds of the Championship season gone, the division has been dominated by two sides - Coventry City and Middlesbrough.
Since matchday four at the end of August, one of these two have occupied top spot as they aim to end lengthy absences from the Premier League.
But this is not a tale of one-way traffic to glory, but exciting twists and turns characterised by winning runs, lots of goals, managerial upheaval and poor runs.
Their top-two clash in November saw Coventry win a thrilling game 4-2 at the Riverside Stadium to open up a 10-point cushion.
Now Boro head to the CBS Arena for the return fixture with a two-point advantage after a huge shift in momentum and form.
As the two pacesetters make their final preparations for the biggest game in the division so far this season, BBC Sport looks into the key aspects of the encounter.
Despite the draw with Oxford United last time out, Coventry still have the best home record in the Championship
When you examine the cold facts, the answer might seem obvious, with Middlesbrough on fire after six consecutive wins and Coventry having only picked up four victories in their past 13 league games, including a frustrating goalless draw at home to 10-man relegation-threatened Oxford United in their last one.
But a psychological crisis for one team might be another's moment of clarity, and how the two sides respond under the shifting pressure of swapping roles will be fascinating.
Not just for this game but for the rest of the run-in.
"With a team like Coventry their dip in form is rarely tactical, it's more psychological," Peter Dutton, an elite sport performance psychologist, told BBC CWR.
"They've led for long periods, so players can shift from playing freely to playing not to lose.
"So it may take slight pressure off them, sitting in the position they're in now rather than top of the table."
As for Boro and their superb run, Dutton said they should feel similarly uninhibited.
He added: "If you look at Middlesbrough, their confidence will be high and they're playing without the weight of defending their long lead like Coventry.
"They can be more free and expressive and Coventry might feel a bit more defensive."
Frank Lampard understands why many are highlighting his side's new position in the table and how that might affect them.
"It depends how you want to frame it," the Sky Blues manager told BBC CWR.
"People are comparing the pressure of being top and being second. These pressures are great. If you'd offered me those at the start of the season I'd have bitten your hand off.
"It's important the lads are just focused on us.
"We've shown ourselves to be a very good team this season in the league and we need to bring that version of ourselves on Monday."
Frank Lampard has won 33 of his 60 Championship games with Coventry
When it comes to big occasions, you would be hard pressed to find someone with more T-shirts in his 'been there, done that' wardrobe than Lampard.
The 106 England caps. The three World Cups. The 11 major trophies for Chelsea. Super Cup, FA Cup - and play-off finals as a manager.
By contrast, the Boro job is Kim Hellberg's first outside his native Sweden, although he had impressive runners-up finishes with unfancied Hammarby in the Allsvenskan.
The Swede admitted recently on Middlesbrough's 'Yer Joking Aren't Ya?' podcast that, growing up, he was a Chelsea fan and Lampard was his favourite player, and now the 38-year-old is tasked with getting the better of his one-time hero.
But for Dutton, Lampard's big-game experience should be a big help for the Sky Blues.
"To an extent as a manager that can help them battle," he said. "It's more of a process than about position [in the table], more about consistency rather than seeing it as a threat.
"A really good question for him and the players is 'are we maintaining who we are or are we reacting to an opponent's rise?'"
Dutton said that "changes the focus" of their preparation, enabling players to prioritise "internal cues" like "effort, process and clarity" rather than any "external narratives" in the build-up to the game.
"I still feel like they're the best two teams in the league," he said.
"I just think the experience Lampard has had as a player - and as manager in the Premier League and Championship - he's been there and done it, I just feel he's going to react and get the players to react in the right way."
Coventry may come into this game on the back of a stuttering run, but this has been a kind fixture for them in recent years.
They have not lost any of their past nine meetings with Middlesbrough, stretching back more than four years.
They beat Boro at home last May in what was effectively a play-off shootout on the season's final day, and came through a two-legged play-off semi-final against them in 2023.
But despite those successes, ultimately there was only play-off heartache for Coventry, and it is a path they will not want to go down again this season, given the position they have been in and their recent post-season failures.
Boro, meanwhile, will believe that if they can end a hoodoo against their bogey side, what can stop them ending nine years outside the Premier League.
