Substitute Cauley Woodrow snatched an equaliser in the final seconds of added time as Luton drew 1-1 at Crystal Palace to hand the Hatters a crucial point in their relegation battle.
Jean-Philippe Mateta's early opener at Selhurst Park looked to be the winner until Woodrow headed home, extending the Eagles' Premier League-leading tally of late goals conceded in the process.
Sunny Singh Gill made history as the first British South Asian to referee a Premier League match, and was spotted signing autographs as he waited in the tunnel ahead of the second half.
The result draws Luton within three points of safety, while Palace will be ruing a huge missed opportunity to put more breathing room between themselves and the drop zone.
Mateta's fifth league goal of the campaign followed some good work from January signing Daniel Munoz, who was able to latch on to Alfie Doughty's loose back pass and find his team-mate just inside the six-yard box, where he opened the scoring with a backwards flick.

Eze threatened twice before the hour mark, while Luton's best early chance after the break came via Republic of Ireland international Chiedozie Ogbene, who directed a header wide of Sam Johnstone's left post from six yards out.
Morris finally had a crack, directing a sharp volley straight at Johnstone before Daiki Hashioka sent his effort over the bar.
It was nevertheless an encouraging spell for the Hatters, who entered the afternoon having scored more goals in the final 15 minutes than every Premier League side bar Liverpool, Manchester City and Arsenal - while the Eagles had conceded the most in that same period.
Yet it was the Eagles who had the first big chance in the final 10 minutes of normal time through an audacious effort from Eze, who launched the ball from inside the centre circle that the scrambling Kaminski could not have stopped, but to his relief skimmed just over the crossbar.
The majority of the chances in six minutes of added time went the hosts' way - including a crossbar-clipping effort from Odsonne Edouard - but it was Woodrow who made his count when he guided in ex-Eagle Andros Townsend's delivery to stun Selhurst Park.
Enes Unal came off the bench to score his first Premier League goal in stoppage time as Bournemouth fought back from 2-0 down to salvage a 2-2 draw at home to relegation-haunted Sheffield United.
Strikes from Gustavo Hamer and captain Jack Robinson looked to have earned the struggling Blades only their second away win of the season.
However, goals from substitutes Dango Ouattara and Unal in the final 16 minutes earned the hosts a point from a pulsating game on the English south coast.
The Cherries were awarded a spot-kick with just 14 minutes played after Tom Davies clumsily swept Dominic Solanke off his feet.
Solanke stepped up in search of his 15th Premier League goal of the season but lost his footing just as was about to address the ball and ballooned it over the crossbar off his standing left foot.

The visitors took the lead against the run of play two minutes later courtesy of Hamer's fourth goal of the campaign.
Hamer set Jaydon Bogle free down the right and when his initial shot was beaten away by Neto, the former Coventry playmaker was on hand to fire the rebound into the roof of the Bournemouth net.
Neto had to be on alert to push wide Oliver Arblaster's cross-cum shot but it was the goalkeeper's mistake from the resulting corner that helped United double their lead in the 64th minute.
Neto punched the corner against Solanke's back, sending the ball kindly into the path of Robinson at the far post and the Blades captain fired home off the inside off the post, with the goal decision system showing it had crossed the line before the Bournemouth goalkeeper clawed it away.
Bournemouth did pull a goal back 16 minutes from time when Ouattara was left totally unmarked to head in Christie's corner from four yards.
And after Ouattara missed a free header, Turkey international Unal rifled home at the far post in the first minute of added time to break the Blades' hearts and deny them two points.
Wolves' bid for European football was boosted by a 2-1 victory over Fulham, but it came at the expense of more injury problems.
Jean-Ricner Bellegarde limped off with just over 10 minutes gone while Pedro Neto, who had been passed fit after feeling his hamstring last weekend, pulled up just before half-time clutching the back of his left thigh.

But the hosts made Fulham pay for missed opportunities, with Rayan Ait-Nouri scoring his first goal since December 2022 in the 52nd minute and Nelson Semedo adding a deflected second before Alex Iwobi grabbed a very late consolation.
The result lifts Gary O'Neil's side up to eighth in the Premier League table in the week when it was revealed Wolves will open contract talks with their manager this summer.
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