Brentford came from two goals down to draw with Ipswich in stoppage time. There were several talking points from the game that GetWestLondon has analysed.

Dijkhuizen has plans B and C

Plan B: Marinus Dijkhuizen

Mark Warburton's mantra was 'plan B is to do plan A better' but Marinus Dijkhuizen is not prepared to shake things up. At 2-0 down, the Dutchman brings on Andre Gray for Konstantin Kerschbaumer; moving from the Bees' traditional 4-2-3-1 to a standard 4-4-2 formation. He changed it again soon after, taking off Alan McCormack and replacing him with Lasse Vibe and moving to 3-5-2. The tactical changes worked.

Defensive concerns

Poor defensively: James Tarkowski

Based on pre-season form, James Tarkowski can count himself very lucky to be in the Brentford starting XI. The defender was off the pace and, although he scored the equaliser, it was not an impressive performance from a player highly rated by the club. It will not be a surprise to see the impressive Harlee Dean parter Andreas Bjelland or Yoann Barbet in the near future if Tarkowski's defensive form continues.

The pitch is a disgrace

Poor: Griffin Park pitch

The Griffin Park pitch is unhelpful to Brentford and it resembled a sandpit by the Braemar Road touchline. It is expected that the quality will improve by after the international break but it is a cause of concern to Dijkhuizen.

Corners matter again

Goal: Bees celebrate

It's been a running joke among Brentford fans over the past year that players might as well kick the ball away for a goal kick. Not anymore. The Bees looked dangerous from set-pieces and were rewarded with Tarkowski's late equaliser, which led to a comedy moment of Peter Gilham announcing the goal scored by 'I don't know'.

Gray worth more

Unsettled: Andre Gray

Andre Gray proved that he is worth more than what Hull have offered with a very impressive performance against the Tractor Boys after coming off the bench. He was disturbed by the speculation, which meant he didn't start, however showed his worth after coming on by pulling a goal back.