A late winner from captain Kyle Bartley ensured Leeds United beat Brentford and secured their third straight home win, moving up to fifth in the EFL Championship table.

In an encounter that produced little excitement and very few chances, it was Bartley who rose highest in the 89th minute to leave his manager Garry Monk relieved.

“We weren’t at our best today,” said the former Swansea boss. “It was a tired performance and at half-time we talked about upping our pace if we could. The players were very honest and they tried to do that and there were a few chances we could have done better with.

“There’s a feeling right now in these tight games that there will be a late chance and that’s a good mentality to have as a group, that three points is important going into the Christmas period.”

Neither side started the game well, Brentford’s 3-5-2 system restricted a Leeds side who appeared to be missing the injured Chris Wood up front.

Both were restricted to long shots, Nico Yennaris and Romaine Sawyers firing off target for the visitors before Kemar Roofe saw an effort of his own deflected wide.

The visitors thought they’d gone ahead when Scott Hogan slotted home Lasse Vibe’s pass across the six-yard box, but the flag went up against the German for offside, despite appearing to be level.

Whilst a solid defensive showing restricted Leeds to few shots on goal, Brentford boss Dean Smith was left disappointed with a late lapse in concentration.

“I don’t think we deserved that, we made a very good team look average for an hour or so today and we defended really well,” he said. “It’s a real blow for us to concede so late, we’ve just lost their man for a second and it’s really cost us on a day where we should have walked away with something.

Discussing Hogan’s disallowed goal, Smith was frustrated with the decision: “I don’t feel the offside decision was justified, I’ve seen a replay of it and it’s really tight, so that’s disappointing because it’s a set piece we’ve been working on all week.”

It looked to be a rare frustrating afternoon for Leeds, the hosts haven’t drawn a match in ten but the game was heading that way after Luke Ayling blazed over from a corner and Doukara missed the best chance of the game when clean in on goal.

Ayling once again came close when his curling effort landed just inches wide, and the 25,000 inside Elland Road could have been forgiven for thinking it wasn’t going to be their day.

But the goal did come, a short corner was worked to former Brentford man Stuart Dallas and his pinpoint cross was put away by Bartley, sparking joyous scenes around the ground.

It wasn’t the first time Leeds have left it late this season and whilst Reading’s late winner elsewhere stopped Garry Monk’s side moving higher in the league, it could have been disaster when John Egan flicked a late overhead effort onto the top of the bar.

Leeds did hang on for another vital three points, though, and Monk continues to be pleased with his side’s resilience.

“We huffed and puffed but we kept going and we kept trying, but that final ball always let us down – when we did create something we didn’t take it but when that last chance came along we took it,” he concluded.

Read more on Brentford each week in The Football League Paper