Bolton Wanderers caused one of the shocks of the weekend as they saw off recently relegated West Bromwich Albion at the Hawthorns.

Josh Magennis scored just 18 minutes into his debut as his downward header beat Sam Johnstone in the Baggies’ goal to give the away side the lead.

Harvey Barnes equalised before Yanic Wildshcut notched the winner late on as the team fancied for the drop managed to pull off an unlikely result against one of the promotion favourites.

Magennis played a typical striker's role, having little to do, but managed to get a goal that aided his side to a three-point haul to start their season off right.

The 27-year-old had three shots during the afternoon and made one key pass in his 90 minutes on the pitch.

Northern Ireland international Magennis got off to a winning start as he lead the line well for Bolton as they started off the season in perfect fashion.

But how did the striker’s performance fair in the eyes of our FLW writers?

We discuss....

Alfie Burns 

Bolton need him to step up and score goals, which he did on Saturday.

 It’s too early to judge him at this level, but that was the perfect start.

Jay Williams

When the Northern Ireland international signed, there were doubts over whether he was the right fit.

But Magennis ran himself into the ground, endeared himself to fans with his work rate and got a well-deserved goal.

He showed his aerial presence by heading in the opener.

George Dagless

He impressed.

Bolton delivered a rude awakening to West Brom, and Magennis led the charge.

He went up against the likes of Ahmed Hegazi and won, that's no mean feat.

Gary Hutchinson

Magennis had a surprising debut because his goalscoring record at Charlton wasn't particularly exciting.

Still, 18 minutes in and he's off the mark, but away from his goal, his all-round display was encouraging. Bolton are still in for a long season, but Magennis has shown he'll be fighting all the way.

Louie Chandler

I was one of the first to criticise Bolton's new striker when he moved to the Macron, so it is only fair I give credit where it is due.

The Northern Irishman benefited from Phil Parkinson playing to his strengths, and he will be a good option in what will be a tough season.