Leeds United were rolled over by a dominant Wolverhampton Wanderers 4-1 at Molineux last night, with the Black Country side extending their lead at the top of the table to four points.

Thomas Christiansen opted to utilise the same team and formation that beat Middlesbrough 2-1 on the weekend, but ultimately it back-fired.

Should Christiansen have put Eunan O'Kane in to form a three man midfield to help relinquish Wolves' attacking threat?

Did Christiansen make a mistake with this pre-game decision?

We take a look....

Adam Simeoni

He had to keep the same team that beat Boro. It would have been foolish to change a winning formula, so Christiansen cannot be blamed for sticking with consistency.

The plan backfired however, and Leeds were blown away.

George Dagless

Perhaps.

I get the thinking because the confidence should have been up after the Boro game.

However, going into a game against Molineux with the idea that it'll be a gunfight is pretty risky - as the Whites find out heavily.

Wolves are always going to win an open game.

Chris Gallagher

He must admit he made a mistake.

Wolves have lost three games all season, once against Sheffield United when they had ten men for 75 minutes and the others against Cardiff and QPR.

Those two got in Wolves' face, were aggressive and direct. I know that's not Leeds' way but he needed to adapt and go for a more solid midfield. Going toe-to-toe with Nuno Santo's men will end badly for any team.

But, how can you legislate for stupidity? Who knows what would've happened had Vieira stayed on as Leeds were on top.

Alfie Burns

With hindsight, Christiansen will wish he had started Stuart Dallas or Eunan O’Kane to give Leeds more defensive protection, but even then it is doubtful whether Leeds could’ve stopped Wolves in the first-half, with Nuno’s men in full flow.

Leeds were impressive against Boro at the weekend, and the same starting XI probably deserved an opportunity to take on Wolves.

Christiansen will learn, as will Leeds.