The Wallabies produced their finest performance under Joe Schmidt to date in taking out the Third Lions Test 22-12 at Accor Stadium.
Australia led 15-0 before a frantic final 20 minutes saw tries and cards aplenty to deliver a fitting finale to one of the greatest Lions Series of the modern era.
Here's what we learned from the Third Test:
The Lions wanted their undefeated Australian tour but were left lifting the trophy with a slightly sour taste.
With pride on the line and 80,000 fans willing them on, the Wallabies dominated from start to finish and gave Australian fans a drought-breaking win at Accor Stadium.
While their attack misfired in patches, it was a phenomenal defensive performance with just seven missed tackles across 80 massive minutes.
Weighing in at 978kg and change, this was one of the biggest Wallabies packs in recent memory.
They played like it too - 140kg Will Skelton was at his monstrous best both sides of the ball and ferociously defended his teammates in every scuffle while the towering Tom Hooper was a deserving best on ground in his first start of the series.
The pair's combining to shut down a rampaging Bundee Aki in the 19th minute was a telling stop and set the tone for an uncompromising forwards performance.
Taniela Tupou's 60-minute stint was also impressive while James Slipper and Billy Pollard both went over an hour in the middle.
A shoutout also to Jeremy Williams, who pinched multiple lineouts and turnovers in his late cameo to put the result beyond doubt.
This Wallabies' wing duo might be the combination Australia run with throughout the upcoming Rugby Championship.
Dylan Pietsch was outstanding in his return to the gold jersey with his early regather and acrobatic finish setting Accor Stadium alight in the eighth minute.
But it was Max Jorgensen again who shone brightest with 95m carried (69 post-contact) and a sensational solo try that showcased silky hands and lightning feet.
Tom Wright looked more assured at fullback this time around his five five tackles busts matching the hard-working Len Ikitau, remains consistently among Australia's top three performers week after week.
Special mention should also go to Ben Donaldson, who steered the Wallabies ship with aplomb and kicked for over 240m after Tom Lynagh's nasty exit.
No one can stir the pot like Nic White – and stir he did.
The moustachioed merchant of mayhem was at his chaotic best on Saturday night, sparking melees left and right and tipping the scales in Australia's favour.
But wasn’t just his off-ball antics that frustrated the Lions.
White’s pinpoint box kicking and clean service from the ruck base was supplemented by desperate defence – most notably in the 57th minute with his lunging tackle on Owen Farrell shutting down a Lions raid.
Two minutes later, the Scone boy was given a well-earned standing ovation in what could well be his final Wallabies Test match. Well played, mate.
Who would've thought a Third Lions Test could become even more dramatic?
Wallabies fans were up in arms after a dangerous clear out from Dan Sheehan that saw Tom Lynagh fail an ensuing HIA went unpunished
Then further drama struck when James Ryan was knocked clean out trying to tackle Will Skelton.
Finally with the game delicately poised at a 8-0 Wallabies lead shortly after half time, lightning strikes wreaked their havoc at Accor Stadium.
Cue 40 minutes of madness - complete with multiple pitch invaders and a full-scale clearing of rows 1-19 - so a massive congratulations to the event and operations staff who kept the ball rolling and the 80,312 crowd that stuck around for a spectacular Test match.