West Bromwich Albion head coach Eric Ramsay believes his side "absolutely" should have defeated Charlton Athletic following their 1-1 draw at home to the Addicks.
The Baggies boss was appointed in January but is yet to win any matches in the Championship since he arrived in the West Midlands and is under increasing pressure.
Albion initially led with George Campbell nodding in Alex Mowatt's corner in first-half stoppage time, but on 70 minutes Charlton's Lyndon Dykes raced onto a Kayne Ramsay pass and calmly finished between keeper Max O'Leary's legs to earn the visitors a point.
"Absolutely it's a game that we should have won and out of the three of the four games that we've drawn in the league recently, that's the one that you're looking at and feeling like we created good chances in open play," said Ramsay to BBC Radio WM after the game.
"We had a lot of territory at the top of the opposition's box and where we needed to convert that into more than a goal off a set play we didn't, and ultimately we put ourselves in a position where when the moment came that we did lack real decisiveness from a defensive perspective, we came unstuck and we find ourselves where we are.
"We only felt positive at half-time about the direction of travel of the game and I don't think that was a problem in the opening stages of the second-half.
"You felt like we'd be the team that would go on and score again and put the game to bed and we absolutely had to do that tonight."