Countries like New Zealand and Australia open their field for the masses, but with South Australia winning the Sheffield Shield, Adelaide saw the overwhelmed crowd running in, greeting the finisher batter, kissing their forehead, clicking selfies, and what not! With the fans storming inside the field came the surging yet unfurling love from the fans. ABSOLUTE SCENES IN ADELAIDE! South Australia win the #SheffieldShield for the first time in 29 years! 🎉 pic.twitter.com/WpACaA876L — cricket.com.au (@cricketcomau) March 29, 2025 After 29 years, South Australia has finally become the Sheffield Shield Champion by defeating Queensland by four wickets. Cricket Australia has shared the moment on their social media account. in the video it was seen that, the moment SA sealed the win, a fan ran in and was quick enough to pick up a stump and leave before the security chased them out. But as the crowd ran inside, the security lost control. SA captain Nathan McSweeney said, "I’d like to thank you guys. To do the double is special and to do it with you is even more special. Thank you very much." Marnus Lubischagne, the defeated captain from Queensland, also appreciated the enthusiasm of the Adelaide fans. He said, “The fans were behind you the whole time, we heard it." Read also: IPL 2025: DC vs SRH Match 10 Preview - Venue, Squads & More South Australia Clinch Historic Shield Victory South Australia ended their 29-year Sheffield Shield drought with a thrilling four-wicket victory over Queensland, scripting a record chase in the final. Chasing 270, Jason Sangha and Alex Carey orchestrated a stunning 202-run partnership after SA stumbled to 3-28 at Karen Rolton Oval. Sangha, in his first season since leaving NSW, remained unbeaten on 126, while Carey struck a fluent 105. Earlier, SA pacer Brendan Doggett, a former Queenslander, starred with record-breaking figures of 11-140, including 6-31 in the Bulls' first innings collapse to 95. SA responded with 271, led by Jake Lehmann’s 102. Queensland mounted a fightback, as Jack Wildermuth (111) and Jack Clayton (100) guided them to 445. SA’s chase seemed in jeopardy early, but Sangha and Carey turned the tide. Sangha fittingly sealed the historic win with a boundary, cementing SA’s 6-270 as the highest successful chase in a Shield final.