After surrendering first place following its loss against premiership contenders Echuca, the Bears travelled to Mansfield Recreation Reserve knowing an instantaneous response was required.
They delivered exactly that, overcoming a spirited Eagles outfit to record a 9.17 (71) to 8.6 (54) victory in round nine.
Mansfield matched Shepparton's intensity throughout the opening half and remained firmly in the hunt, trailing by 10 points at quarter time following a dogged first period before closing the gap to five points at the main break.
The Eagles found avenues to goal through Will Foster, Nathan Buchanan and William Dunstan, while their pressure around the contest prevented the Bears from fully capitalising on their opportunities going forward.
Despite controlling large stretches of play, Shepparton's inaccuracy in front of goal kept Mansfield within striking distance.
The Bears kicked 4.10 across the opening two quarters, leaving the door ajar for the home side despite enjoying the better of the play.
With the match delicately poised, Shepparton began to gain greater control after half-time as Lewis McShane and Luke Smith - in his 100th game - produced important goals during the third term as the Bears stretched their advantage to 11 points heading into the closing stages.
While Mansfield continued to fight through Foster and Jay Canterbury, the visitors' defensive structure held firm when it mattered most.
The decisive break came in the opening stages of the final quarter.
Goals to Tanner Madigan, Liam Broom and Kade Odwyer helped the Bears create crucial separation on the scoreboard, pushing the margin beyond three goals and allowing them to withstand Mansfield's late efforts.
McShane and Angus Williams led the way in attack with two goals apiece, while Shepparton's even spread of contributors proved a major factor.
Trent Herbert, Liam Broom, Tanner Madigan, Kade Odwyer and Luke Smith all hit the scoreboard as Zac Metcalf, Max Brodie, McShane, Ashley Holland and Liam Teague all made significant contributions in a defiant display.
The result sees Shepparton immediately rebound from last week's disappointment against Echuca to reclaim top spot on the GVL ladder, reinforcing its credentials as one of the competition's leading premiership contenders.
“Our week and our preparation doesn’t differ based on the week before,” Stephenson said.
“The [Echuca] game was really combative and competitive and there was a fair few momentum swings.
“We just wanted to rectify our contest, our pressure and probably our inside game because that's what we thought that was what let us down in the third quarter the week before.
“I think it's been a strength of our ability to play the games right out to the final siren, we've been a pretty good in particular fourth quarter team and I think that's a credit to the amount of work we've done in the off-season.”
Commenting on the spread of scorers on the day, Stevenson spoke highly of the contributions of players from across the board.
“We kind of had a little bit of a different mix forward with having Angus Williams back and he was able to hit scoreboard early, after that it was about taking our opportunities,” he said.
“I think that's been a really nice thing throughout the year that we haven't been reliant on one or two to have to have really big influence on the scoreboard - it's been a shared load and it was the same yesterday.”