DEAD-EYE JOE AT THE DOUBLE
MARK Hughes revealed it was seeing Stoke’s Joe Allen up close which persuaded him he could flourish further forward as the Welshman’s scoring streak continued with a brace against Sunderland.
An injury doubt before kick-off with a hamstring problem, the £12million summer signing from Liverpool broke the deadlock with an eighth-minute header before lashing in a second on the stroke of half-time as the Potters cruised to a 2-0 victory, their first in the Premier League this season, over the winless Black Cats.
Allen took his tally to five in four games for club and country and has already equalled his best-ever Premier League haul for a season when he managed four with Swansea in 201112.
His purple patch has coincided with him operating in a more advanced role in midfield, something which Hughes only considered him for after working with him at training.
“We pushed him further forward just because sometimes when you get the opportunity to work with players dayin, day-out you see things that you didn’t realise that they may have the capability of,” Hughes said.
“His anticipation of where the ball is going to land was evident for everyone to see. In midfield or out wide or wherever the ball was dropping he anticipates really well.
“So if you can get him anticipating things in the box he’s going to get on the end of things and that’s what’s happening at the moment.
“We’re delighted with what he’s pro- ducing. Clearly he’s a little bit fragile at the moment because his workload since the summer is up greatly.
“We are going to have to manage him through this period while his body gets in tune but he’s doing exceptionally well. We’re delighted he’s with us.”
Although he is still waiting for his first three points at the Black Cats’ helm, manager David Moyes took positives from the performance at the bet365 Stadium.
“I didn’t think we played as bad as the 2-0 score suggested,” the Scot said afterwards.
“I actually thought we played better in the first half than the second half. We conceded two terrible goals.”