Sheffield United will not go down without a fight, says BBC Radio Sheffield's Andy Giddings, despite their position at the bottom of the Premier League table.
The Blades have 16 points on the board - three of which came in the reverse fixture against Brentford - but Chris Wilder's side "will not throw the towel in", which will make them a dangerous opponent for the Bees on Saturday.
Sheffield United are bottom of the Premier League table, nine points from safety with eight games left to play and with one win since the victory over Brentford in December. What have you made of the last few months?
It has been an unfortunate mix of great effort at times, toil at times and just simply being outclassed at times. They are an honest bunch at Sheffield United but, ultimately, for all of the trying, it has just not really worked for them.
Even in the recent match against Fulham, when they scored a load of goals, they still could not quite see that through and that is almost the biggest evidence of where they are at right now.
They will give most teams something to think about, it is just about whether they can get over the line and that, unfortunately, has been a theme for the whole season, not just recently.
In key parts of certain matches, they look great, and in others, it has been quite the opposite.
As you mentioned there, Sheffield United were 3-1 up against Fulham, but ended up drawing 3-3. How gutting was that for them as a team in their situation?
In those circumstances, that is when it is the most gutting. In that match, they could have gone 4-1 up, but were denied the opportunity to do so, rightly or wrongly, by VAR.
On the face of it, they conceded two very good goals, but a confident team just does not do that, and that is why they are not further into the battle to stay up than they actually are.
Even if this season had been what might be described as a very good season, they might be five or 10 points better off than what they actually are, but no more than that.
It is not a foregone conclusion, but it is going to take a real fight to remain in the Premier League. Is there belief they can pull it off?
I think there is belief. Certain players in the squad are never ones to throw the towel in and Chris Wilder will not let them do that, so there is no thought in my mindâs eye that there is any kind of nod to next season whatsoever, despite the fact discussions have been had about next season.
They will not throw the towel in between now and the end of the season, regardless of the opposition, because if they are going down they will want to go down swinging. It is better to go down by a handful of points than a load of points.
They also do not want to be a team that sets unwanted defensive records as there is a great deal of pride about the place.
It is just that maybe the quality, the energy and the mental and physical fatigue of what has been a very difficult season is catching up with them.
Which player should Brentford fans keep an eye on?
Sheffield United have got some handy players. Whether he will end up being a star for Manchester City, who knows? But to my mindâs eye, at least, James McAtee is someone who will have a career in the Premier League. As Brentford know all too well, he is capable of scoring goals from distance!
On his day, Vini Souza is a very good, combative central midfielder and Ben Brereton Díaz and Oli McBurnie as a pair can cause unbelievable problems for defences. If they all play and they all click, they will give Brentford some problems.
Pound for pound, over the course of the season, most fans would agree with the idea that Jack Robinson has consistently been the best player this season. He is captaincy material, has good positional sense and is strong in the air. He is a really good player.
How is Chris Wilder likely to set up his side at Gtech Community Stadium?
I would be surprised if there is a deviation from 3-5-2. There may be a cosmetic shift with that further forward, depending on how McAtee is deployed, but in the basic sense, it will be three at the back with wing-backs and a combination of two up front.
It has worked for them to a point and there is no reason to think that, over the course of the ensuing games, Wilder will change all of that.
There have been times this season when they have done things differently, under Paul Heckingbottom, and it has not necessarily worked quite so well.
Because of the make-up of the team and the personnel, it is not the 3-5-2 that was rampaging and almost getting into Europe under Wilder. It is different to that, but that is the basic structure.
Whatâs your score prediction for this one?
I would like to think there are more points in Sheffield Unitedâs season from here on in, so I am perhaps minded to look a little optimistically at this game.
I would not necessarily think it would be anything other than a tight game, separated perhaps by fine margins.
Sadly, the realism of the situation is, from a Blades perspective, it probably means Brentford will be on the right side of those fine margins. It may be a 1-0 either way type of scenario.