'Eustace's Rams are staying up and looking up'published at 15:03 6 May
Ed Dawes
BBC Radio Derby commentator

Mission accomplished for Derby County. Championship survival was a must if the club was to continue the upwards trajectory put on its way by owner David Clowes in 2022.
A few weeks before the culmination of the season, wing-back Kane Wilson uttered: "It's important we don't waste the hard work done last season" by getting out of League One at the second attempt.
For me, this is the moment in time when the club can shake off its damage and rebuild culture brought on by former owner Mel Morris' decision to put it into administration.
Staying in the second tier means the club can be recognised as that Championship team, no sprinkling of sugar but a solid recipe for growth.
The story of this season has been split into two halves. Perhaps there was an underestimation of the challenges of the Championship and what was needed to finish without a relegation battle. Or perhaps there were bouts of imposter syndrome from the then head coach.
Paul Warne's achievements at Derby County will go down in the history books. At times he played exciting, attacking football, he was an infectious personality who you enjoyed being around. But did he really believe he deserved the role as Derby County head coach?
He spoke in his first media conference about how proud his father would have been that he was managing the same team as Clough and Taylor. I am not sure he thought he was worthy of that.
That run of seven straight defeats brought an end to his tenure. No manager can survive a goal drought and a lack of points. The fans had turned and they let him know.
A brave decision was made by David Clowes and chief executive Stephen Pearce to remove Warne and find an alternative. Derby were heading down without it.
Former Ram John Eustace had told me years ago during a conversation while we were watching our boys play football, that he always wanted to return to manage Derby one day. This was his moment.
Prizing him away from Blackburn took time and money and, with the Rams bottom of the table and seven points a drift on 7 March, the journey was going to be tough.
Eventually, with his coaches Matt Gardiner, Keith Downing, Paul Clements and 'football genius' Jake Buxton, the Rams showed signs of recovery. The improvement in each individual was noticeable. Suddenly the mistakes were not being made, the goals were not punishing them and they looked like they could play.
Marcus Harness said after the win at Plymouth Argyle: "Some players thrive in chaos, some thrive with structure and information."
This insight into his mindset made observers look differently at the players. All of them showed signs of confidence, creativity and understanding.
From 7 March, when the club were rock bottom and seven points adrift, Eustace's Rams took 21 points and won away from home three times. The togetherness got the Rams over the line to be able to take that next step.
But it isn't a rebuild now, it is a strengthening of the foundations laid in the past three seasons.
Derby County should be looking up now, not down, and with investment and a solid summer transfer window there is every possibility.