This article is part of Football League World’s ‘Player view’ series, this content strand is where we put ourselves in the shoes of a given player, and offer an opinion-based outlook on the perspective on the situation at hand...

While Barnsley's current position at the bottom of the Championship table suggests that they need points more than any other side in the division right now, it could be argued that the win will have been just as important to Blackburn Rovers when these two sides met at Ewood Park on Saturday.

Going into the game off the back of just one win in their last eight, and with a gap already growing to the top-six spots the Lancashire side had been targeting at the start of the season, a game against the league's basement dwellers, who themselves were without a win since the opening day of the season, will have likely been targeted as match where Rovers could once again kick start their season.

Indeed, with Tony Mowbray's side having already slipped to defeats to two newly promoted sides on home soil this season, this was a game you felt they had to win simply in order to show they are a side capable of taking opportunities such as these.

That is something that they would do, but only just. Twice Barnsley would come from behind to level in the game, before Rovers eventually claimed the three points thanks to a man whose individual importance to the club continues to show little sign of waning.

Ever since his arrival at Ewood Park, Bradley Dack has been a key figure for Blackburn Rovers, and an almost immovable figure in the starting lineup when fit, with good reason.

In each of two full campaigns with the club so far, Dack has been Rovers' top scorer, first firing them to an immediate promotion from League One, and then helping them to re-establish themselves in the division last season.

Now, Dack is once again doing the business for Rovers as they look to force their way up the table, with the attacker's eight goals this season already five more than any of his current teammates, with his contributions once again coming to the fore against Barnsley.

After a mini-drought of four games without a goal, Dack was back to his clinical best on Saturday, getting himself in the right place at the right time to roll home his side's opener after teammates Lewis Travis and Adam Armstrong had capitalised on some loose Barnsley defending, before demonstrating all his determination and athleticism to acrobatically force home that crucial late winner for Rovers.

What is interesting about that, is that Dack's double on Saturday did not exactly equate to an eventful game for the attacker, with only five players who started the game attempting fewer passes than the Blackburn man, who also embarked on just a single dribble in across the course of the 90 minutes.

That however, is unlikely to be something that Dack is going to be concerned about coming away from this one, given his goalscoring, match-winning contribution, especially when you look at the passion with which he celebrated his second and Blackburn's third on Saturday.

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Indeed, when you look at the struggles some of his teammates are having in front of goal right now, it may make sense for Dack to leave some of the more nitty-gritty elements of games to other members of the Rovers side, while he focuses more on the responsibility of putting the ball in the back of the net.

Given the accolades and recognition he is getting for it, it is hard to see any reason for Dack would have any issue with being handed such a role.

If you were to ask any Blackburn fan whether they would prefer Dack to be heavily involved in a game, but not score and their side lose 1-2, or for the attacker to have a much quieter game but score twice to win 3-2, almost all of them would surely pick the latter. Put simply, you feel Dack would as well.