North Melbourne's 2014 semi-final clash against Geelong was one of its most memorable victories in the past decade.
As the Roos prepare to take on the Cats this Sunday, NMFC.com.au looks back at the match report from last year's famous win.
Running Roos ousts Cats
By Nick Bowen - AFL.com.au
North Melbourne has defied recent finals history to upset Geelong and win through to a preliminary final, but the Roos had to survive a massive last-quarter scare to emerge with a thrilling six-point semi-final victory at the MCG on Friday night.
The Roos led all night after setting the game alight in the opening term with six goals in the first 17 minutes, and looked to be home when Jack Ziebell goaled at the 14-minute mark to put North 32 points up.
But they had to dig deep – very deep – to escape with a 14.14 (98) to 13.14 (92) win that sets up a preliminary final meeting with the Sydney Swans at ANZ Stadium next Friday night.
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Tom Hawkins was the Cat who almost stole victory for his team, kicking three consecutive goals in six minutes from the 16-minute mark of the final term to drag Geelong back into the contest.
The Cats piled on the last four goals of the match, getting to within six points at the 27-minute mark when Jimmy Bartel marked on the goal-line and converted from an acute angle.
The Roos frantically held on in the dying minutes, and ruckman Todd Goldstein was the hero.
After North skipper Andrew Swallow was pinged for a deliberate out of bounds with 32 seconds left on the clock, Andrew Mackie pumped the Cats deep inside their forward 50.
But Goldstein cut off the attack, flying in front of a pack of four players to take a game-saving mark 25m out from the Cats' goal.
Even then, the Roos had to survive another scare with Mackie bombing the Cats into attack last time, but the final siren ended their charge – and their season.
North coach Brad Scott said he had felt helpless in the coach's box during the game's desperate last minutes, but felt his team had not done much wrong, paying tribute to the Cats' ability to fight back.
"We did a few things just technically wrong, but I think it would be wrong to say we took our foot off the pedal. I think they're a good team and they came at us," Scott said.
"Fortunately, we were good enough to withstand the charge."
The Roos coach said he felt his team had controlled most of the game after its fast start.
"We set ourselves to just get out and compete early and Geelong did what great teams do and they came back, but I thought for the first three-and-a-half quarters we were right on top," Scott said.
"We just played some really good footy, really good finals footy.
"The start was critical, but I just thought we continued that on for the majority of the game."
The Roos did not come out of the night unscathed, with Jamie Macmillan suffering a hamstring injury that saw him substituted from the match in the third quarter.
Star veteran Brent Harvey could face scrutiny from the Match Review Panel for a collision with Joel Selwood that left the Cats' skipper with a cut above the eye. However, at first glance, Selwood's injury appeared to have been caused by an accidental head clash.
North, who finished the home and away season in sixth spot, became the first team outside the top four to reach a preliminary final since Collingwood in 2007 – and just the third since the existing finals system was introduced in 2000 (Hawthorn in 2001 was the other).
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The Roos set their win up in the first term, kicking seven of the game's first nine goals to lead by 30 points at the 27-minute mark of the first term.
Apart from a few Geelong bursts, the Roos largely controlled the game until Hawkins' late flurry.
The Roos went into half time with a four-goal lead, but could not break the Cats despite stretching their lead to five goals on four occasions after the main break.
Goldstein was best on ground, taking full advantage of the Cats' undermanned ruck division by dominating Mark Blicavs and Josh Walker at ruck contests to give North's midfielders first use.
The Roos finished the game with 54 hit-outs, had 15 possessions and kicked one goal, but it was his game-saving mark that will live longest in North fans' memories.
Vice-captain Drew Petrie was outstanding for North, kicking 4.4 and setting the tone with his defensive pressure that earned him two free kicks for forward-50 tackles.
Nick Dal Santo was all class with 35 possessions and a clinical finish from a tight angle for a goal at the 12-minute mark of the third term.
Sam Gibson put on a trademark running clinic, exploiting his elite endurance to rack up an equal game-high 35 disposals, 24 of which came in a rampant first half.
Ben Cunnington and Levi Greenwood were also important in the midfield for the Roos, while Lindsay Thomas kick-started them with three goals in the game's opening eight minutes.
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Geelong finished the home and away season in third and was the only top-five team North had not beaten this year entering September, with the Cats comfortably accounting for the Roos in rounds 10 (20 points) and 19 (32 points).
Cats coach Chris Scott said Geelong was not about to drop its bundle despite its straight-sets exit from the finals.
"I'm incredibly disappointed right at the moment, but really driven and motivated, even at this disappointing time, to improve and get better," Scott said.
"We were poor at times tonight. The opposition were excellent, but we found a way to get ourselves back into the contest and give ourselves a chance.
"And, as a club, we are incredibly proud of our players."
Hawkins finished with five goals for the match, after Nathan Grima had done a solid job on him for the first three quarters.
Josh Caddy was one of the Cats' best performers, giving Geelong a bustling presence up forward and in the midfield.
Joel Selwood waged a one-man war against North at times in what was a spiteful clash, wearing strapping around his head for the much of the match and changing his torn jumper twice.
Josh Walker also proved a handy foil for Hawkins, kicking a career-best three goals.
North's win helped coach Brad Scott close the gap in his head-to-head battle with twin brother and Cats coach Chris, with the Roos now having won three of the teams' seven contests since Chris took over as Geelong's coach in 2011.
The Roos will enter next Friday night's clash with Swans at ANZ Stadium on the back of six straight wins and armed with the confidence of having won its only clash with the Swans this year, by 43 points at the SCG in round four.
The Cats join West Coast (2007) and Port Adelaide (2001) as the only top-four teams to bow out of the finals in straight sets since 2000.
The Roos could regain Lachlan Hansen (hip) and Leigh Adams (concussion) for the preliminary final against the Swans.
GEELONG 5.1 5.6 8.9 13.14 (92)
NORTH MELBOURNE 7.1 9.6 12.9 14.14 (98)
GOALS
Geelong: Hawkins 5, Walker 3, Duncan, Caddy, Blicavs, Enright, Bartel
North Melbourne: Petrie 4, Thomas 3, Ziebell 2, Turner, Goldstein, Harvey, Black, Dal Santo
BEST
Geelong: Caddy, Hawkins, Selwood, Lonergan
North Melbourne: Dal Santo, Gibson, Goldstein, Petrie, Cunnington, McDonald
INJURIES
Geelong: Rivers (calf)
North Melbourne: Macmillan (hamstring)
SUBSTITUTES
Geelong: Jackson Thurlow replaced by Lincoln McCarthy in the third quarter
North Melbourne: Jamie Macmillan replaced by Ryan Bastinac in the third quarter
Official crowd: 65,963 at the MCG