Phish celebrated the San Francisco Giants’ World Series victory over the Kansas City Royals while performing in front of a Bay Area audience last night at the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium. The crowd went wild early in the first set, when the band all of a sudden worked their first-ever rendition of Queen’s “We Are The Champions” into the middle of “The Moma Dance” to mark the home team’s triumphant win (it was only an instrumental version of one verse).

The victory “Moma,” which followed a set-opening “Stealing Time From The Faulty Plan,” then played into a standard “Free” before the band moved on to “Back On The Train” and a “Yarmouth Road” that also contained teases of the earlier Queen tune. Next came a “Strange Design” that played into “Taste” and then “The Wedge.” After the audience burst into a “let’s go Giants” chant following “The Wedge,” guitarist Trey Anastasio congratulated the team before noting that keyboardist Page McConnell is a big Mets fan. Anastasio then said that McConnell often streams his team’s game on a phone during the band’s shows, with Page adding that, “we can’t be world champions all the time…or ever.” On that note, Anastaso dedicated “The Line” to all of the losers in sports before the set came to a close with a nicely played “Wolfman’s Brother.”

Phish came back to kick off the night’s second stanza with a rocking “First Tube” that segued into yet another worthy “Down With Disease.” The band left the tune unfinished after 13+ minutes as they moved on to “Theme From The Bottom” before finally coming to a pause after a typically mind-expanding “Split Open and Melt.” A solid “Heavy Things” then turned into a jammed out “Light” that morphed into a relatively lengthy set-closing “Possum.”

Upon returning for the encore, Phish launched into the night’s biggest non-baseball related surprise—the first “Contact” of 2014 (the tune has only appeared once a year since 2011). In a nod to contemporary pop music, Anastasio worked a quote from Meghan Trainor’s hit song “All About That Bass” into the Mike Gordon-penned fan favorite. The song was then followed by a tasty “Meatstick” that played into “Character Zero” to wrap up the night.

Phish will continue their tour tomorrow when they kick off their tour-closing Halloween run with a special three-set show at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

Here’s a look at last night’s show as it appears on Phish.net:

Wednesday, October 29, 2014, Phish, Bill Graham Civic Auditorium, San Francisco, CA

Set I: Stealing Time From the Faulty Plan, The Moma Dance > We Are the Champions^ > The Moma Dance > Free, Back on the Train, Yarmouth Road, Strange Design > Taste, The Wedge, The Line,Wolfman’s Brother

Set II: First Tube > Down with Disease* > Theme From the Bottom > Split Open and Melt, Heavy Things > Light -> Possum

Enc: Contact, Meatstick > Character Zero

(^) Phish debut.
(*) Unfinished.

Notes: We Are the Champions was played immediately following the San Francisco Giants’ victory in game seven of the World Series, and was a Phish debut.  Only one verse was performed, instrumentally. Yarmouth included a We Are the Champions tease from Trey.  Following a “let’s go Giants” chant after The Wedge, Page congratulated the Giants, adding that he watched the whole series. Trey told the crowd that Page was a Mets fan and that Page watches every Mets game streamed on his phone with many of them on the organ while the band’s playing. Page said  “we can’t be world champions all the time… or ever.” Trey then introduced The Line in honor of losers in sports. Disease was unfinished. Trey quoted All About That Bass in Contact.