After the first partition of Poland in 1772, and its status as a Russian protectorate between 1773 and 1789, it was clear to all involved that major reforms were needed to maintain Poland as an independent state. The Constitution of 1792 was a major improvement, greatly increasing centralization and modernizing archaic and useless institutions like the Sejm. Historically, this attempt at modernization was stopped by a Russian invasion and another partition, but what if it hadn't? Suppose Russia suffers a major defeat in the war it was fighting against the Ottomans at the time, and its attention is distracted from Poland, buying time for the new administration to be fully established. Poland was by this point long past its golden age where it maintained hegemony over Eastern Europe, but a strong Polish state in the 1772 borders might still be a major player in Eastern Europe, and a serious check to the OTL ambitions of the various ussians. What might be the effects of a successfully implemented Polish constitution?