Camp's Spot On
Colin Calderwood believes loan goalkeeper Lee Camp secured his place in Nottingham Forest folklore with his Pride Park penalty save.
The former Rams goalkeeper denied his home-town club victory in the A52 'derby' by thwarting Nacer Barazite from the spot.
The game finished 1-1 with referee Stuart Attwell disallowing two Derby goals in a barnstorming finale.
And manager Calderwood said: "A wee bit of folklore has been written with Lee Camp's penalty save.
"It was written in the stars that either Lee, Robert Earnshaw or Kris Commons would have a major impact on the game and fortunately for us it was Lee."
Forest had looked to be on course for a second successive away victory when an Emanuel Villa own goal gave them the lead early in the second half.
But the Argentinean atoned for his error by equalising soon afterwards and the tide appeared to have turned in Derby's favour when Lewis McGugan was shown a straight red for an ill-advised challenge on Paul Green.
Calderwood added: "I probably wouldn't argue with the decision. He hit the ball but the term reckless will definitely be on the referee's report.
"We can take a lot of credit from the game, hanging on with 10 men, but I'm disappointed.
"I'm disappointed with the manner in which they scored. For an away team in a 'derby' we had them exactly where we wanted them.
"We should have done better. There's a marginal offside and it probably shouldn't have stood but it was disappointing to concede in that manner.
"We were just building nicely when Derby got their equaliser."
Derby manager Paul Jewell was left fuming by Attwell's decision to disallow Miles Addison's late strike.
Calderwood revealed: "For the first time this season I think we've had a bit of good fortune with a refereeing decision.
"He's given a penalty that wasn't but then ruled out a goal that looked perfectly legitimate."













