Fulham were held to a 2-2 draw at Craven Cottage as Derby missed out on an eighth straight Championship victory on Saturday.

It was their second trip to West London in a week, and manager Steve McClaren made three changes from their win over QPR - the most notable being Craig Bryson given his first start since September.

However, it was the home side who started the game on the front foot. Tom Cairney curled an effort over the bar after 12 minutes, while a Kevin McDonald volley just before the half-hour mark from a tight angle was well held by Scott Carson.

There was an early blow for Fulham, when Tomas Kalas was substituted soon afterwards. This led to the first attack for Derby, who were able to stun their hosts with the opener.

Ragnar Sigurdsson sliced a clearance from a Johnny Russell through-ball, to allow Tom Ince to net his second goal in a week with a low drive past David Button.

Fulham reapplied the pressure after their major setback, and with two minutes of the first half remaining Lucas Piazon put his effort across the face of goal - but he was not able to find a home player to connect.

Their reward came in the first minute of stoppage time, when Floyd Ayite followed up his strike against Rotherham in the week with a tap-in thanks to good work by Ryan Fredericks.

The goal was the first scored against the Derby defence in six games, although it was little more than the home side deserved.

Fulham started the second half with a notable increase in confidence, although they were let down too often by a poor final ball.

The lead was taken just after the hour mark for the hosts, when Stefan Johansen pounced on a poor clearance to fire home.

Derby almost equalised immediately when Button was forced to parry a Russell effort.

The game-tying goal came on 75 minutes, when Alex Pearce buried home a free header from a corner delivered by Ince.

Fulham again put on the pressure after conceding, and Piazon found his 84th-minute free-kick ricocheting off the crossbar.

Both sides looked to try for a late winner, to cap off a lively contest, but the final scoreline was a fair reflection of the game.