Brentford boss Andy Scott has appealed to the 10,642 crowd which squeezed into Griffin Park on Saturday to come back tomorrow.

The Bees' biggest home crowd since the FA Cup win over Sunderland three years ago witnessed a pulsating 3-3 draw with promotion rivals Wycombe Wanderers at Griffin Park.

And Scott would be glad to see the lion's share return for tomorrow's home game with Chesterfield, as the Bees look to close in on promotion from League One.

Scott said: "I am very proud of the fact that we can attract that many people to a game - only Bradford in this division can probably attract a bigger crowd - and I hope they come back after what they saw.

"Just as important was the fact the crowd stayed with us when we fell behind and gave the players a real boost.

"Of course I'm disappointed with the goals we conceded, but you have to be happy with the football you saw out there."

Yet another early goal saw Jordan Rhodes give Brentford the lead inside two minutes, poking home after Alan Bennet flicked on David Hunt's corner.

But Wycombe were level 12 minutes later when, from another corner, their new loan signing from Bristol City John Akinde beat Mark Phillips to the ball to head home.

The Bees were in front again soon after when David Hunt curled in a free-kick which beat everyone, including Wycombe keeper Marek Stech, as it floated in.

The visitors pulled level again before the break when John Mousinho, one of two ex-Bees in the Wycombe line-up, tapped home from another corner, although Brentford had a good shout for it to be chalked off as Rhodes was shoved in the back.

And when the Bees fell behind shortly after the break, it was certainly undeserved. Brett Johnson, having only been on the pitch for a matter of minutes after replacing the injured Ryan Dickson, dithered and was dispossessed by Akinde, who finished superbly.

It was not until Tommy Docherty was sent off for an elbow on Hunt with 20 minutes left that Brentford looked like getting back into it.

Suddenly they were attacking at will, and the equaliser came with eight minutes left when Charlie MacDonald's shot deflected invitingly for Aston Villa loanee Sam Williams to net his first goal for the club.