JACK Darling reckons he long ago cast aside his Grand Final nightmare from 2015, but most others hadn't forgotten.
MATCH REPORT Sheed gets Eagles home in a Grand Final classic
The usually sticky-handed West Coast forward's spilled chest mark at a key stage that day – with his Eagles mounting a charge at Hawthorn – had haunted his reputation ever since.
Darling's shot at redemption finally arrived on Saturday, and not even another hard-to-believe dropped mark on his own on the goalline in the dying stages could ruin his afternoon.
DARLING'S BLUNDER 10 things we learned from the Grand Final
This was far from the 26-year-old's finest performance in a mostly brilliant season, but his powerhouse third quarter forever altered his big-game status.
A dirty three-disposal opening half, with Collingwood two goals up after a ferocious early onslaught, threatened to make Darling the butt of jokes for many more years.
But a different player emerged from the rooms, even if the man himself thought little changed.
He suddenly ran to the right spots, the marks most importantly stuck – six of them in the third quarter alone, including four contested – and West Coast began playing through him.
THE MOMENT 'Sheed's got the most impossible goal'
When the Eagles had the chance to set up in attack, it was Darling rather than Josh Kennedy who went to the goalsquare, so hot was he for that 30-minute period.
The twin towers ultimately combined for 18 marks, with Kennedy booting three goals and Darling one.
KING KENNEDY Every Eagle rated from the Grand Final
"We stuck to our guns and I ended up having a bit of an impact in the third quarter and the rest is history," Darling said.
"I just did what I was doing in that first half and, as a forward, sometimes your luck changes, or the ball movement changes, and it came my way.
"I was reading the play a bit quicker … but I wouldn't care if I had four touches and no goals, if we won the premiership."
His emotion-charged embrace with his wife Courtney and son Max in the rooms afterwards – wedged between a series of interviews – was in stark contrast to his despondent 2015 self.
"It feels amazing. It's what I've always dreamt of," he said.
And as for that dropped mark: "I was thinking about if I was going to play on and kick a goal, so it was a bit unfortunate, but in the end it didn't cost us."