Well, look at that, another day, another victory celebration in the streets of Toronto.

At a downtown parade, the men in red of Toronto FC were toasted for their brilliant performance over the weekend in outclassing the Seattle Sounders and winning our city’s first MLS Cup championship.

Winning, it seems, is getting to be a bit of a habit around here. So much so that, dare we say it, Toronto might just be on the cusp of a new golden age of sports.

In September, the Toronto Wolfpack – the newest professional outfit in town, and trans-Atlantic to boot –were League 1 champions in Britain’s Rugby Football League.

Last month, the Toronto Argonauts – one of our most venerable sporting institutions – pulled off a thrilling comeback victory over the Calgary Stampeders to become the Canadian Football League’s 2017 Grey Cup champions.

Now, Toronto FC – after years of ineptitude that finally culminated in a wild, Viking-clapping celebration on Saturday in the cold at BMO Field – is on top of the MLS mountain.

Much more of this and Mayor John Tory will have to clear some space on the City Hall walls for all the championship photos coming his way. And he may want to think about repaving the parade route.

Which raises an unlikely thought.

What if the Toronto Maple Leafs, after a half-century of soul-crushing futility, were to finally win the Stanley Cup this season only to find that the city has, well, grown tired of winning?

After all, no less a student of human emotions than Donald Trump has said it’s quite possible to get too much of a good thing.

“We’re going to win so much, you’re going to be so sick and tired of winning, you’re going to come to me and go, ‘Please, please, we can’t win any more’,” he famously said during last year’s presidential campaign.

Somehow, when it comes to sports, we doubt that will happen here.

Few cities have known sporting Dark Ages quite like Toronto.

The Leaf teams of the 1970s and ’80s and the era of Harold Ballard scarcely bear thinking about. Since the heady days of 1992 and 1993, some Blue Jay summers have been so interminable that fans have looked forward to sleet and snow. For years, the Argos played to a near-empty Rogers Centre. And it was sometimes hard to tell which sport the fledgling TFC and Toronto Raptors were actually playing.

No, another championship will always be welcome in this town. And things don’t look too bad at all.

The young, dynamic Leafs are sitting pretty as Christmas nears, and the odds-makers in Las Vegas consistently rank them in the Stanley Cup hunt.

The Raptors are among the top half-dozen teams in the NBA (though most fans, the Western Conference being what it is, would settle for an Eastern Conference championship).

The MLB Toronto Blue Jays are. . . well, forget that one.

The Jays are recovering from an awful year. Mustn’t be greedy.

Still, who imagined that Toronto would have it half this good as 2018 looms? Maybe it is as Nelson Mandela once said: “I never lose. I either win or learn.”

If so, Toronto sports fans were obliged to do an awful lot of learning for an awful lot of years. But all things apparently do come to (s)he who waits.

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These days, Toronto suffers from an embarrassment of sporting riches.

Our cups runneth over.

All of them.