The Spygate sequel is on. And this time, as the voiceover for the trailer might boom, the stakes are even higher. Derby showed enormous courage and buckets of quality to beat West Brom and set up a play-off showdown with Marcelo Bielsa’s Leeds United that, let’s admit, was the rematch we all wanted. The drama that swirled round their last encounter was one of the stories of the season, when Frank Lampard took great umbrage at having his training sessions spied on by a Leeds employee. Derby's players celebrate after Harry Wilson's spot kick confirmed the victory over West Brom and their play-off qualification Harry Wilson wheels away in celebration after converting from the penalty spot to score Derby's third against West Brom Frank Lampard clenches his fists in celebration as Derby march into the Championship play-offs with victory on Sunday Harry Wilson sends his spot kick into the bottom corner to give Derby a two-goal lead over West Brom on Sunday A topless Mason Bennett celebrates after scoring a rebound from close range to put Derby back into the lead on Sunday Stefan Johansen celebrates after bringing West Brom level two minutes after half time with a low shot into the corner Johansen's left-footed shot finds the bottom corner to peg Derby back in their must-win game to reach the Premier League Martyn Waghorn roars in celebration after giving Derby a 19th minute lead in their home game against West Brom Waghorn heads home from Jayden Bogle's cross to break the deadlock for the Rams in the must-win game on Sunday MATCH FACTS, PLAYER RATINGS AND LEAGUE TABLE Derby (4-3-3): Roos 7; Bogle 7.5, Keogh 7.5, Timori 8, Malone 7.5; Holmes 7.5 (Bennett 65’ 7.5), Johnson 7, Mount 7.5; Wilson 8.5 (Evans 90’), Waghorn 7.5 (Nugent 41’ 7), Lawrence 8 Subs not used: Carson, Marriott, MacDonald, Huddlestone Goalscorers: Waghorn 19, Bennett 70, Wilson pen 73 Booked: Bennett Manager: Frank Lampard 8.5 West Brom (3-4-3): Johnstone 7.5; Dawson 6, Bartley 5 (Robson-Kanu 78’), Hegazi 6; Holgate 6, Harper 7, Johansen 7.5 (Field 75’), Gibbs 6; Murphy 6 (Phillips 60’ 5), Gayle 6.5, Rodriguez 7 Subs not used: Morrison, Mears, Townsend, Bond Goalscorers: Johansen 47 Booked: Johnstone, Bartley, Johansen, Rodriguez, Hegazi Manager: Jimmy Shan 6 Sent off: Robson-Kanu Man of the Match: Harry Wilson Referee: Tim Robinson 8 Att: 32,055 Championship Premier League Championship League One League Two Scottish Premiership Scottish Div 1 Scottish Div 2 Scottish Div 3 Ligue 1 Serie A La Liga Bundesliga The fallout saw Bielsa painted as an Argentine James Bond, although some £200,000 poorer after personally paying the FA fine. Lampard might not admit but he is sure to revel in the prospect of gaining revenge. His Derby team will go into Saturday’s first leg back here at Pride Park with great confidence. They were much superior to West Brom, taking the lead and then stepping on the gas when Jimmy Shan’s side equalised in the second half. Middlesbrough might have believed victory at Rotherham would suffice, but Derby’s conviction to the task was compelling. They had eased the early tension by taking the lead in the 20th minute with a well-worked goal easy on the eye. Mason Mount, Tom Lawrence, and Duane Holmes were all involved in the centre of the final third, with Jayden Bogle eventually put through on the right. Bogle whipped a brilliant first-time cross and Waghorn sensed the opportunity, racing ahead of Kyle Bartley to get into space. His glancing header was expertly dispatched. Lampard’s celebrations were purposeful but reserved. His team were bringing good energy and came close to teasing another opening. Twice they tested Sam Johnstone. Tom Lawrence let fly from 25 yards and Johnstone pushed round he post. Then Waghorn’s header from Scott Malone’s cross went straight at him. Derby's Duane Holmes competes for possession alongside West Brom's Rakeem Harper during the early stages of the game Derby youngster Tom Lawrence skips past West Brom pair Rakeem Harper and Mason Holgate during the first half Derby midfielder Mason Mount shoots towards goal as the hosts look for an opening in a tight encounter at Pride Park But West Brom always carry a threat with their attacking options and twice they should have scored in the first half. First Jay Rodriguez set up Jacob Murphy by wriggling past Richard Keogh and slipping through a pass. But Murphy dragged his shot wide. Then on the half hour Stefan Johansen took a quick free-kick that Murphy did well to reach before the byline and he cut the ball back for Dwight Gayle to run onto. Gayle’s finish was uncharacteristically awry, his prod going wide. So it was not a total surprise when the visitors equalised two minutes after the interval. It was a terrific goal too. Ahmed Hegazi chanelled his inner Jay-Jay Okacha when up against Keogh as the ball bounced. He did a couple of keepy-uppies then backheeled to Rodriguez, who hit a flat pass to Johansen. Johansen cut inside and with his left struck a magnificent finish into the far corner beyond the dive of Kelle Roos. With Middlesbrough wining comfortably at Rotherham, Derby knew a draw would be insufficient and anxiety around the stadium rose. Yet the hosts’ response was impressive. Bradley Johnson gets his foot on the ball for Derby as West Brom striker Dwight Gayle watches on from close quarters Derby midfielder Tom Lawrence is brought down by Kyle Bartley to earn Derby a penalty for their third goal of the game Inside three minutes they could have reclaimed the lead when Lawrence sent David Nugent clear. Nugent had replaced the injured Waghorn and didn’t quite connect with his finish, which Johnstone saved with his foot. Johnstone then sprung to his left to push wide an effort by Mason Mount. But Derby kept pushing and moved to victory with two goals in three minutes in the final quarter. First Mason Bennett nudged in from close range when Johnstone saved Lawrence’s shot. Then Lawrence burst clear of two West Brom defenders and fell under the tackle of Bartley. Contact was minimal but referee Tim Robinson pointed to the spot. Wilson dispatched the penalty into the bottom corner to spark a pile-on by his teammates. In injury-time Hal Robson-Kanu stupidly got himself suspended from the play-offs by kicking out at Bradley Johnson, seeing straight red and a three-match ban. All rights reserved for this news site dailymail and under his responsibility