(Reuters) - West Bromwich Albion do not have the funds to spend big in the January transfer window but manager Alan Pardew hopes their slide into the Premier League's bottom three will come as a wake-up call for the players at the club. West Brom started the season with back-to-back wins but have since gone 16 league games without a win and are second from bottom, two points from safety. Pardew, who replaced Tony Pulis last month, previously said West Brom were keen to strengthen their attack and were interested in Liverpool's Danny Ings but now thinks they will take a more conservative approach. West Brom travel to 17th placed Stoke City later on Saturday and Pardew said the prospect of losing ground in the battle for survival should start the alarm bells going off. "It's a strange thing to say but going in the bottom three, when you've been hovering around it, is not such a bad thing," Pardew added.
Source: The Star December 23, 2017 06:00 UTC