Nottingham Forest moved eight points clear of the relegation zone after running riot with four goals in the first half of a stunning 5-0 victory at Sunderland.
Trai Hume's own goal in the 17th minute sparked Forest into a frenzy, which has left them well clear of Tottenham, who occupy the final spot in the bottom three and visit relegated Wolves on Saturday.
"This is the result of the season," said Your Site' Jamie Redknapp. "To go there in the predicament they're in, an unbelievable result. I can only imagine what (Roberto) De Zerbi and Nuno (Espirito Santo) are thinking now watching it behind their sofas. These three points are absolutely huge."
Forest were in dreamland at half-time as Chris Wood capitalised on Robin Roefs' error to slot in a second before Morgan Gibbs-White fired in from a corner and then Igor Jesus completed the rout to give them an extraordinary four-goal lead inside 37 minutes.
Sunderland defender Nordi Mukiele argued with some of his own supporters as the half-time whistle blew, with their European hopes suffering a major blow with four games remaining. Only Burnley and Tottenham have conceded more goals than them since the turn of the year.
Dan Ballard attempted to restore some pride when he headed in midway during the second period, but the goal was harshly ruled out for a foul by Mukiele on Forest goalkeeper Matz Sels following a VAR check.
Forest had just one shot after half-time as they soaked up Sunderland's attacks, capping a perfect night with Elliot Anderson's cool finish in added time that has piled the pressure on their relegation rivals this weekend.
Your Site' Jamie Redknapp:
"I don't think anyone expected that result tonight. I thought before the game that a point would be a good result.
"But to go there and completely turn the goal difference in your favour and get three points in the manner they did will certainly send shockwaves through the West Ham and Tottenham fanbases, players and managers."
Nottingham Forest head coach Vitor Pereira told Your Site:
"I need to thank the staff that cares about the set plays because today they were fantastic. They created a lot of problems.
"The pressing created a lot of problems. Our pressing created a lot of problems. And a clean sheet. A clean sheet is important in this moment of the season to show this mentality, this spirit, this confidence because we have the character.
"I'm very happy for my players, for the supporters, for the club and for the staff. We are in a good moment because we created the spirit, we created the mentality and tactically now, because we have more time working together, we are in a moment where we can face every game to get points."
Sunderland head coach Regis Le Bris:
"We started okay and we felt progressively that they were more involved, more intense, more pragmatic as well, and pressed well. We were unable to build up on the pressure, and the momentum shifted at that moment.
"They were clinical because they scored four goals in the first half, and it was like a punch in our face.
"It's a strong reminder because when we drop just our standards by 10 per cent, we will be punished, and it was the case today. They were good. We have good players, and we were not at their level, so no excuses."
On Mukiele exchange with fans: "It's normal to react, and I think our fans are not happy. Even if they supported us, I think it was really impressive during the second half. After that, emotions are not rational, so I can't comment on it."
Your Site' Lewis Jones:
A 5-0 demolition of Sunderland made it back-to-back statement wins for Nottingham Forest, who have now scored nine goals in their last two games and are cantering clear of relegation.
The numbers alone are striking. The manner of them, even more so. This is not a side playing within itself. This is a team unshackled.
Under Pereira, Forest have leaned into a philosophy that feels almost rebellious in a league where caution often reigns, especially away from home.
Naming two strikers on the road, as he did at the Stadium of Light with Chris Wood and Igor Jesus is a throwback of sorts. It's also a gamble. But it's one that paid off emphatically as Forest pressed relentlessly at an intensity that Sunderland couldn't handle.
In a league where fear can often dictate approach, as it did under Sean Dyche at Forest, Pereira's willingness to double down on aggression is refreshing.