Manchester: Edinson Cavani has posted only two updates to his 2.1 million followers on Twitter over the last 11 days, both of them showing him hard at work first on a running machine and then on the practice field.
The Uruguay striker seemingly wanted the world to know he is in good shape and ready to make his debut for Manchester United.
And he'd have been desperate for that to come in the Champions League against Paris Saint-Germain, the French club where he spent seven trophy-laden years and is the record scorer with 200 goals in 301 appearances.
It wasn't to be, though, with Cavani not traveling with the squad as he was not deemed fit enough to play after seven months out of action since what proved to be his last match for PSG before the coronavirus outbreak led to a worldwide suspension of soccer.
Cavani mightn't have any strong lingering sentiment for PSG when he watches the match from afar, having left the club under something of a cloud in June after refusing to extend his expiring contract by a couple of months to enable him to be involved in the pandemic-delayed finale to last season's Champions League.
Cavani clearly was miffed at losing his place in the team last season after the arrival of Mauro Icardi. He spent part of the first half of the season injured, then saw PSG block his attempt to move to Atletico Madrid in January.
By March, when the pandemic was declared, Cavani had already decided he would be leaving PSG when his contract expired and the final stages of the Champions League getting rearranged for August wouldn't change that.
He never got to say a real goodbye to PSG's fans because his final match for a club where he won six French titles came in the last 16 of the Champions League against Borussia Dortmund at an empty Parc des Princes.
Now a United player after clinching a move on the final day of the European transfer window, it's at the stadium he graced for seven years where he would have wanted to make a statement return after more than half a year out.