Southampton must notice one Championship superiority Charlton Athletic hold and work accordingly to avoid getting outplayed against them more than a month later.
The Coventry City-esque improvement orders are out for Southampton and immediately, many Saints will envy the scoring difference between the duo. The former is spreading the word on their clinical traits whenever hovering past the box, and one must save applause for their attacking chemistry there.
Agreed, Southampton are inefficient than City but their clumsy final third is to be blamed.
Very frequently, players like Shea Charles, Adam Armstrong and Tom Fellows have tripped ball possessions when they were an action or two away from bagging a goal-worthy effort.
Relating to it, the Southampton faithful will interpret signs of a bottom-half position in final third matters. Well, Still's men almost touched the floor. Going by Fotmob's numbers, Wrexham are the ones saving Southampton from sinking to the bottom.
Saints must master the possession attaining art from Nathan Jones
Truly, St. Mary's can't thank Wrexham enough for always being kind to them but this humiliation has a crucial page left. The table toppers in this statistic are Nathan Jones' Charlton Athletic, who seem to be announcing themselves on every commendable shortlist.
From James Bree's division-wide praise to now racking up possessions outside of their halves, Jones is setting Saints up for more self-doubts than what St. Mary's can boast of his Southampton ties. It's firmly boiling up that Jones will be there to receive the travelling Saints in the final weeks of November.
Plenty of starters will greet Jones well, but the latter may comfortably remind Southampton it's an away territory, after all. Charlton's outfield players who snatch possessions without asking against Saints' frontmen who are prone to slipping passes that come to haunt the backline.
Hope it doesn't, but the Charlton Athletic tour can become a Hull City rewatch.