Nick Cassidy continued his and Jaguar's supreme late-season Formula E form by winning the first race of the campaign-ending London weekend.
In what was Cassidy's penultimate race with the team - Jaguar having formally announced his exit, which was first reported by The Race last month, earlier this week - he appeared at ease, feeding back that "this is the best the car has been all year" as he ran fourth in the opening stages after passing Dan Ticktum at the start.
Cassidy served his Pit Boost stop relatively early on in the 38-lap race then used the clean air that he emerged into to make inroads on the leading pack, cycling up to second by the time the leaders' stops had played out.
And he didn't have to wait long to move into the lead. He took attack mode for the first time at the end of lap 26, cruised up to the back of Nyck de Vries, bided his time on the following lap as the Mahindra driver put up a robust defence of the lead, then executed a move for first place along the start/finish straight.
Cassidy led from there, via a late safety car after Ticktum crashed his Cupra Kiro-run Porsche, to wrap up a second successive win.
It was also his third victory in five races, and a third-straight win for Jaguar - though it wasn't a flawless race from the team.
Team-mate Mitch Evans had led from pole, but his race unravelled desperately. Having delayed his first attack mode activation and been passed by De Vries and Porsche's Pascal Wehrlein when they took theirs, Evans finally took his at the race's midway point - only to drop in between David Beckmann (Kiro) and new Formula E champion Oliver Rowland.
That triggered instant frustration from Evans, who said over the team radio "you lost me the f***ing race".
He was shuffled back to ninth by the time the pitstops had played out and had his misery compounded late on when Ticktum, attempting to defend from Jake Dennis, tagged the rear of the Jaguar and spun Evans around - after which he said he was "happy to park" his car.
He nevertheless salvaged a point for 10th at Rowland's expense.
De Vries and Wehrlein completed the podium behind Cassidy, while Stoffel Vandoorne used an early stop of his own to vault up the order and finished fourth for Maserati, ahead of Dennis, Jean-Eric Vergne (DS Penske) and the second Mahindra of Edoardo Mortara.
Norman Nato scored points for just the third time this season in ninth.