Queens Park Rangers are one of just two teams in the EFL to have won their last four games, the other is Cheltenham Town.

At the weekend they beat Millwall 2-1 away at The Den with Nahki Wells scoring a brace.

Mark Warburton's side looked pretty solid and created a good amount of chances. They used good positional play, created and exploited spaces and used the long ball to good effect. They lined up in a 5-3-2 with Wells and Hugill up front, as seen below.

In buildup, the centre backs were positioned very wide and one would often be positioned like a deep full-back and push into space down the line. The wing-backs didn't push up too high and tried to give options to the centre-halves.

Ball was the base of the midfield three and sat back at times while Eze and Chair brought dynamism to the midfield, the were press resistant and agile. They positioned themselves well and dragged defenders into wide areas, creating space as seen below.

The space in midfield allowed Wells and Hugill to drop between the lines and receive long and progressive passes. Millwall's defenders marked tightly and could be moved around by QPR quite well.

They pushed their wing-backs high and wide into space when they could. Millwall also played a back five, their three centre-halves played very compactly while wing-backs had more license to press. However, this left gaps in the half-spaces and gaps in the backline which the central midfielders were able to exploit.

Wells and Hugill stayed tight and pinned the back opposition back three together, able to make runs into the box and create space as well. The wing-backs looked to put in early crosses when they found space for the strikers to run onto. Meanwhile, a midfielder made a later run into the box and tried to sweep up rebounds.

Overall, QPR had good patterns of play which were effective. They created good quality chances and used good positioning and exploited the space they created.