Everton have emerged from a nerve-shredding afternoon with their English Premier League status intact, thanks to a 1-0 victory over Bournemouth as Leicester City and Leeds United were relegated in a dramatic season finale.
The Merseyside club's 69-year stay in the top flight was in peril at halftime, deadlocked 0-0, with 2016 champions Leicester ahead against West Ham United. That combination of results put Everton in the relegation zone, but Abdoulaye Doucoure's stunning 57th-minute strike earned them the victory they required.
With Leicester winning 2-1 and that game over, Everton fans had to bite their fingernails, pray or just simply not watch the 10 minutes of stoppage time, which included a superb save by Everton goalkeeper Jordan Pickford.
The final whistle prompted a joyous pitch invasion, with smoke from blue flares drifting across the old stadium that will host top-flight football again, after another Everton escape.
Leeds, the other club in the last-day relegation drama, went down with a whimper, hammered 4-1 at home by Tottenham Hotspur, with Harry Kane scoring twice.
Everton ended in 17th place on 36 points, with Leicester in 18th on 34 and Leeds on 31.
Southampton, who were already relegated, finished bottom with 25 points, although their farewell was a memorable one, as they drew 4-4 at home with fifth-placed Liverpool.
Champions Manchester City were beaten 1-0 at Brentford, who signed off a brilliant season by completing the double over Pep Guardiola's side, as Ethan Pinnock scored a late winner.
Arsenal, whose title challenge collapsed under City's relentless pursuit, at least ended on a high note, as the runners-up crushed visiting Wolverhampton Wanderers 5-0.
Manchester United clinched third with a 2-1 home win over Fulham, while fourth-placed Newcastle United rounded off an impressive season with a 1-1 draw at Chelsea.
Seventh-placed Aston Villa grabbed the last European spot with a 2-1 victory against sixth-placed Brighton & Hove Albion to book a place in the Europa Conference League, leaving eighth-placed Spurs without European football next season.
Reuters