Rusk brought improvement but 'no Plan B' from the benchpublished at 12:29 29 April
Ray Hunt
Fan writer


After saving a point at West Ham to equal Derby's worst Premier League points tally record, could we build on that positive and overtake that mark of 11?
For the most part, yes. We saw huge improvement in performance and for large portions of the match, we looked capable of competing with Premier League outfits. Even European-chasing ones. The vibes are as good as they have been all season. Simon Rusk has them playing with more desire, and personally, I am enjoying watching them more since he took temporary charge. We have yet to concede in the first half under his tutelage.
After ceding possession to Fulham, we struck inside 15 minutes with virtually our first attack and kept them without a registered shot on target in the first half.
Inevitably though, Fulham got what they needed - like so many before them. An injury-time dagger from Ryan Sessegnon condemned us to another defeat. The 27th of the campaign and 14th at home. Another goal in stoppage time to see the point(s) snatched away.
That is now 28 points dropped from winning positions and an all-too-familiar pattern from a season where we have conceded 11 goals after 90 minutes. That is almost one every three games and highlights our bench is not capable of saving games for us.
Contrast that with the past two home games against Aston Villa and Fulham where they have had four goals and an assist coming off their benches to make all the difference.
There is no 'Plan B'. When fatigue strikes, who can save points off the bench? If we sort this out, then things will improve. All we ask is to stay in games and be competitive. We will go in to Leicester with a slight wind in our sails and with something still to play for.
Find more from Ray Hunt at the In that Number podcast, external
