Adelaide hung on by the tips of their fingernails but, at long last, shook their Magpie monkey.
The nine-year Collingwood curse is dead. After 3318 long days, Adelaide busted one of the AFL’s longest spells, in front of 54,283 fans - the biggest ever AFL crowd at Adelaide Oval - beating Collingwood for the first time since 16 July 2016.
When the Crows last defeated the Magpies - some 3318 days ago - Barack Obama was still US president, Malcolm Turnbull had been sworn in as Australian Prime Minister and Scott Pendlebury was racking up touch after touch.
Well, some things haven’t changed.
More importantly, Saturday night’s pulsating three-point triumph all but sealed the Crows’ first minor premiership since 2017 - the last time they made the top eight.
Adelaide had to work overtime for this one, particularly their backline which was inundated by one Collingwood entry after another.
The Pies amassed a whopping 71-39 advantage in inside-50s but just couldn’t land the killer blow.
The brilliant Nick Daicos’s goal on the burst in the 27th minute of the fourth quarter was the game’s final score, Collingwood attacking hard to the finish line.
The Magpies had it all on their terms early, marching to a 25-point quarter-time cushion after 30 minutes of the footy almost exclusively living inside their forward half.
But no deficit is beyond Adelaide’s potent reach and they turned the tables emphatically with a 5.1 to 0.1 second term, allowing them to pinch a five-point half-time lead.
The heavens opened in the third stanza which descended into a defensive-dominated sodden slog, the Crows spending most of it on the ropes but repeatedly warding off glancing Collingwood blows.
Another goal drought followed in the fourth, finally busted by James Peatling in the 18th minute, Adelaide’s single-figure lead seemingly worth plenty more.
Riley Thilthorpe, largely subdued by ex-Crow Billy Frampton, took a huge clutch mark on his guy and converted to restore Adelaide’s nine-point lead.
If this was a September dress rehearsal between the cagey 2023 champions and the upstart challengers, the sequel looms as a beauty.