It could be the dawning of a new era for Canada’s most important golf tournament.

The PGA Tour is poised to unveil revolutionary changes to its massive, complex schedule for 2019, ones that could rescue the historic Canadian event from the purgatory it has been locked into for more than a decade.

This could be good. Really, really good. But like a blind date, no sense in getting too excited before we get a look at ya.

We already know some of the changes coming. The PGA Championship is being moved from its current position as the fourth major of the season in August, seemingly untethered to the other three, to becoming the season’s second major in May.

That’s big. That’s a seismic shift. Starting next year, it will be The Masters, then the PGA, then the U.S. Open and finally the Open Championship.

After that, it will be a more orderly run up to the Fed Ex playoffs and the so-called “fall season,” culminating with the Tour Championship in September.

All done by the beginning of the NFL season, if all goes according to plan.