[ad_pod ]

Charlton Athletic may be on their way to Wembley for the League One play-off final against Sunderland, and they may have won eight of their last ten matches, but if they are to reach the promised land of the Championship Lee Bowyer should make some changes to his starting line-up.

Swap Josh Parker for Jonny Williams

Bowyer has done a fine job in the dugout throughout the season, but his faith in Josh Parker is questionable and probably born out of necessity more than anything else. The striker has failed to find the net in 12 games for the Addicks, and the lack of service he offers Lyle Taylor could prove Charlton's downfall on Sunday. Jonny Williams, by comparison, provides that magic which could turn and win a game.

At 1-1 in the second leg, Parker missed a golden opportunity from just three yards out - unforgivable in such a massive game. Williams meanwhile showed composure at a key stage of the game, brought fresh life and ideas to the Charlton attack and would surely love to score against his former club at Wembley.

Check out what the Pl>ymaker FC squad got up to at the Football Blogging Awards in the video below...

Switch Purrington for Chris Solly or Naby Sarr

The other player who needs to drop to the bench is Ben Purrington. Since arriving at The Valley he has been solid but unspectacular and Charlton need more from their full backs if they are going to overhaul Sunderland - especially if they play a midfield diamond or three at the back.

Chris Solly is ever-reliable and could move to left-back, while although Naby Sarr put hearts in mouths when his penalty was saved in the shoot-out against Doncaster, he is better at tackling and is stronger in the air. He could deal better with the threat posed by Sunderland's Luke O'Nien and Max Power down the right flank.

Bowyer has placed his trust in both Parker and Purrington since their January arrivals, and the team has no doubt produced better results since the New Year. However, Sunderland are a different proposition to most in League One and in a final the team has to be clinical both with and without the ball.