Wellington's dream start to the A-League Men season is over, beaten at home 3-0 by a spirited Newcastle Jets.
Apostolos Stamatelopoulos scored a double but Clayton Taylor provided the star turn, assisting the opener, scoring the Jets' second and drawing a penalty 30 seconds after halftime.
Taylor, 19, picked up the ball behind the halfway line and beat four Phoenix players with a bustling run before being squashed in the box by retreating defenders Finn Surman and Scott Wooton.
Stamatelopoulos' subsequent penalty put the game out of reach for Wellington, ending their unbeaten start to the season.
Jets coach Rob Stanton lauded his forwards, with Stamatelopoulos now having scored six goals in six games.
"He's well-prepared, he's strong, he's determined ... he's arrived here with a changed mindset," Stanton said.
"He's just settled, he got married. Everyone has periods in their life where you could go up or down, and I think pennies have dropped in his head ... he doesn't want to look back on his career and think what might have been.
"He's going to be great for us."
Coming into the contest, rookie coach Giancarlo Italiano had Wellington on top of the table for the first time in eight years.
Their loss means Western Sydney or Macarthur FC will replace them on top should they win their round-seven clashes.
On a blustery Saturday night, the Nix weren't able to bring star striker Oskar Zawada into the contest, who hobbled off after an hour with a leg issue.
The Jets negotiated the conditions superbly and were ahead inside four minutes.
Taylor blitzed past Tim Payne, cutting inside and dragging the ball back for Stamatelopoulos who turned and struck inside the far post for Newcastle's opener - and the club's 600th A-League Men goal.
Wellington's best first-half chances fell to goal-shy midfielders Nicholas Pennington and Alex Rufer, with nothing seriously testing Ryan Scott in the Jets net.
With the Phoenix eager to reset at halftime, Newcastle gave them a fresh headache with a second goal in the 43rd minute.
Taylor was on hand to bundle home when Alex Paulsen dropped a cross he looked surprised to have to deal with.
Payne hit the post twice in the second half as the Nix chased the match - with a 68th minute low strike and a 85th minute curling cross.
Those strikes were the closest Wellington came to a reply on the night their bubble burst.
Italiano conceded they were done by Taylor's pace.
"We could have played another two, three hours and we wouldn't have scored," he lamented.
"We defended quite poorly ... and the sucker punch was giving away the penalty."