After being on the wrong end of late goals on multiple occasions this season, Millwall finally had some luck of their own last night.

Lee Gregory’s 91st-minute equaliser won the Lions a valuable point in the 2-2 draw at the City Ground after being two goals down to Nottingham Forest.

Shaun Williams halved the deficit on 74 minutes in what would finally be a late show from the Lions to salvage a point from a perilous position.

Neil Harris will be pleased his side were able to battle and claw their way back to restore parity late on and leave Nottingham with a point that many feel could have been all three to the visitors.

Despite the draw, Millwall remain in the bottom three with Aston Villa to come this weekend at The Den.

But on the back of the result last night it should give Harris and his side confidence heading into this Saturday’s fixture.

With that said, here’s one positive and one negative point from Millwall's Wednesday night draw with Nottingham Forest at the City Ground.

At 2-0 down, Neil Harris took off James Meredith and Tom Elliott and replaced them with Tom Bradshaw and Steve Morison. The personnel change resulted in a change in system.

The Lions are fundamentally a 4-4-2 team, come rain or shine.

But needing the chase the game with 20 minutes left, Harris broke away from that, and it worked in their favour.

Lee Gregory, Morison and Bradshaw were all up front with a back three of Mahlon Romeo, Murray Wallace, and Jake Cooper.

The extra man up top helped the Lions keep the ball up the pitch longer and gave them an extra man in the middle when they lost the ball.

At 2-0 down in a 4-4-2, a change in system prompted a change in fortune as Millwall snatched a well-earned point in what was a dominant performance.

All too often this season Millwall have allowed their opponents space and time on the ball.

This was no different last night when Nottingham Forest had exactly that for most of the first half.

The Lions backed off and allowed their hosts control of the ball, and that was the reason for conceding the first goal.

Millwall’s defence backed off and allowed Joe Lolley time and space to hit a well struck shot low and hard in the bottom right-hand corner. It has been a problem all season, and it came to the fore once more.

Neil Harris should get his team to press and close down when the opposition are on the edge of their box, and it needs to be sorted as it has been somewhat of a cause for concern all season long.