Latrell Mitchell has helped South Sydney flip the script on Penrith, inspiring the Rabbitohs to come from behind and beat their premiership rivals 20-18 at Accor Stadium.
In a thrilling finish, Souths trailed 18-10 with six minutes to go before Mitchell helped breathe life back into the Bunnies with a try off a Lachlan Ilias kick.
The Rabbitohs fullback was denied moments later when Nathan Cleary dragged him down from behind after a linebreak.
But Souths were still able to provide a last-gasp effort to win the game when Mitchell offered space on the left edge, Alex Johnston offloaded and Cody Walker put Isaiah Tass over.
The win marked only the Rabbitohs' second over Penrith in their last 12 matches, during a run that has often seen the Panthers come from behind to win matches.
For parts of Thursday night's clash it appeared it was going to be the same old story again for South Sydney.
Arch-nemesis Stephen Crichton scored all 18 of Penrith's points, including tries in the 66th and 71st minutes to take them from 10-8 down to 18-10 up.
There had even been a Crichton intercept-of-sorts off Walker, when he latched onto a kick from the five-eighth and went down field to put the Panthers on the attack for the back-to-back tries.
But unlike in the 2021 grand final when Crichton's hands had proved decisive, it would not be the difference.
Instead, the game-breaker was Mitchell.
The Souths superstar finished the match with 14 tackle busts and one linebreak, after playing a role in all four of the Rabbitohs' tries.
He got them on the front foot for their first when he put on a flick pass for Alex Johnston, before he bounded out of dummy-half on the next play.
He had his hands on the ball again later in the set, before Damien Cook darted over from dummy-half.
Then when the home side trailed 8-6 early in the second half, Mitchell did it all himself to put the Bunnies back in the lead when he beat three Panthers to score after a 10-metre scrum.
That all came before his heroics in the final six minutes, again emphasising why he is one of the most important players at South Sydney this century.
Mitchell has now scored six tries in his past three games, with his run coming after coach Jason Demetriou urged him to get his hands on the ball more early.
"When he gets in the game early, he sends a message to himself but most importantly to his teammates," Demetriou said.
"He had some real energy about him.
"He brings sometimes a dimension that is unstructured as well, when he is playing through the middle, offloads and supports people. He gets us on the front foot a bit.
"But it wasn't going to be about one individual tonight. One individual doesn't beat Penrith."
Ultimately, it was enough to cancel out Crichton's brilliance for Penrith.
In a back-and-forth match, Jarome Luai looked threatening with most his touches in attack while winger Sunia Turuva finished off the field with a foot injury.
"It's a cruel game sometimes," coach Ivan Cleary said.
"When you are up by eight inside the final 10, you like to think you could sew it up.
"But if there is one team you don't want to be playing when they were like that tonight, it's probably Souths."