Simon Grayson looks forward to Leicester City...
Simon Grayson insists Leeds United have some unfinished business at Elland Road when Leicester City roll into town on Tuesday (7.45pm).
The visit of the Foxes is United's first outing on home soil since the 6-4 home defeat at the hands of Preston, and Grayson and his troops are keen to re-dress the balance after that miserable night.
United followed that Preston loss with defeat at Ipswich, but Grayson's players responded magnificently at Middlesbrough on Saturday and the boss is looking for more of the same against Leicester on home soil.
"We have some unfinished business after last time we played here," he said.
"Preston was just one of those things that can happein in football - it was a result that was hopefully of a freak nature.
"The confidence hasn't been diluted, and I think you could see that at Boro on Saturday.
"We need to carry forward what we did on Saturday. We were a lot more professional and we killed the game off at Boro.
"It doesn't alter the fact that we lost a game we shouldn't have lost against Preston here, but we had a solid base on Saturday and during my time here, we have always had a solid base at Elland Road which is important."
Leicester were 2-1 winners in the Carling Cup at Elland Road in August, but they have struggled in the league, and Paulo Sousa has been replaced at the helm by former England manager Sven Goran Eriksson.
Eriksson took charge of his first Leicester game at the weekend - the Foxes secured a point from a 1-1 draw with Hull City - and Grayson says the new boss will be looking to make his own mark on the team.
"I'm sure Sven is pleased to be back in English football," said Grayson.
"He's worked with them for a couple of weeks now and he'll have his own ideas about what he wants.
"There'll be a few players probably looking to prove a point who maybe didn't figure under the old manager, and they'll be looking to impress Sven.
"We've had them watched three or four times, but it's not about them, it's about us and what we do.
"We've shown what we can do when we eradicate mistakes, and that's the big thing. We have to eradicate mistakes and find the level of consistency which we're capable of."