
Lyndon Dykes rescued a point for Charlton on 70 minutes to score his second goal for the club
West Bromwich Albion's winless run in the Championship stretched to 10 games as they were held to a draw by Charlton.
Albion had not scored in their last four Championship outings but led at the break after George Campbell climbed highest at the back post to head in Alex Mowatt's corner in first-half stoppage time.
The hosts spurned several chances to extend their advantage, with Josh Maja and Isaac Price both missing good openings.
Charlton then made them pay on 70 minutes as Lyndon Dykes raced on to Kayne Ramsay's pass and calmly finished between Max O'Leary's legs to earn the visitors a point.
The result leaves the Baggies just one point above the relegation zone and increases the pressure on head coach Eric Ramsay, who has been in charge for the last eight matches.
Campbell's header capped a dominant first half in which the hosts had more than 60% possession and six shots to Charlton's one.
Maja squandered the clearest opportunity to make it 2-0 when he was sent through one-on-one in the 52nd minute by a delightful Mowatt through ball but the striker slid wide.
That was before Price somehow blazed over from inside the area after a good run and pass from Jayson Molumby in the 69th minute.
They paid the price a minute later when Dykes ran on to a ball over the top from Ramsay to equalise.
Whilst the Baggies remain 21st in the table, Charlton's 11th draw of the season means they stay in 17th on 41 points from 34 games.
West Brom's next game is at fellow strugglers Oxford United on Saturday while Charlton are at home to play-off prospects Wrexham on the same day.
West Bromwich Albion head coach Eric Ramsay told BBC Radio WM:
"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.
"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."
Charlton Athletic striker Lyndon Dykes told BBC Radio London:
"In the end, a good point. I think the game itself was a bit scrappy, especially first half. We didn't show our full capability, but at the end of the day, we take the point.
"It was a good, better performance second half and we threatened a bit more and looked a bit more like ourselves, so we have to take the point and then we move on."
On his goal: "It was a great ball from Kano [Kayne Ramsay], great movement. Just wanted to hit it low and was really happy to see it hit the back of the net because we needed it as a team. I think it lifted us a little bit and obviously for myself. I'm really enjoying it here and I'm feeling good, especially in front of goal."
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