Dominic Calvert-Lewin was the hero as Everton grabbed a last-gasp equaliser to take a point against Manchester United at Old Trafford on Saturday evening.
Everton appeared to be going home empty handed before Calvert-Lewin latched onto a Michael Keane flick-on from a 94th-minute free-kick to beat David de Gea and make it 3-3.
The Blues had been 2-0 down at half-time after Edinson Cavani’s header and Bruno Fernandes’ brilliant strike, but fought back well after the break.
Abdoulaye Doucoure tapped in after De Gea parried out Calvert-Lewin’s cross and James Rodriguez brought them level with a powerful finish into the bottom corner.
Scott McTominay’s flicked header from Luke Shaw’s free-kick put United back in front at 3-2 before Calvert-Lewin grabbed the headlines.
Everton were understandably jubilant at the final whistle, having extended their unbeaten away record in the Premier League to seven matches, and those celebrations continued in the dressing room.
Alex Iwobi’s snapchat story provided a glimpse into how Carlo Ancelotti’s side enjoyed the result, with Calvert-Lewin leading the celebrations with some dance moves while Tom Davies cheers him on.
Everton scored three goals from three shots on target to stay sixth in the Premier League on 37 points from 21 games.
Calvert-Lewin moved onto 13 Premier League goals for the season and was delighted with his impact.
"I think it's frustrating that we got back level after going two goals down but then let them get the lead again from a set-piece,” he told Sky Sports.
"We just hung in there, it was a difficult evening, especially when they had the ball for large parts and we had to stay disciplined.
"Then I just had to smell the goal at the end and put it in."
He added: "To be fair, I was just waiting for a little nick. I knew I wasn't going to get the first contact so it's just about being ready for the second one and being ready for it to drop.
"Once it hit me in the stomach I knew I could get there before the keeper, so I just thought 'beat the keeper and it's a goal'."