YANN Kermorgant has called for a cauldron of noise as Cherries go in search of the “missing five per cent” against play-off rivals Wolves.

The French striker reckons Kenny Jackett’s men might be tempted to follow in the footsteps of recent opponents and adopt a defensive approach in tonight's clash at Dean Court (7.45pm).

Cherries maintained a stranglehold on possession in last Wednesday’s 2-1 defeat at Nottingham Forest and created the lion’s share of the chances in Saturday’s 0-0 draw with Blackburn, a result which extended to five matches their winless league run.

But irrespective of Wolves’ game plan, Kermorgant is confident Cherries are on the cusp of redressing the balance and that a buoyant home crowd can make all the difference.

Kermorgant told the Daily Echo: “It is a huge game for both teams so they will maybe come here to be compact.

“They are a good team who can pass the ball well so not as much as Nottingham Forest or maybe Blackburn but I think they will come here and try not to concede first.

“Maybe then, they will try to nick a point or all three.

“It is difficult. We have seen over the past few games that having the possession does not always win you the game.

“The best example of that was at Forest. They were the home team but just sat back from the start. I could not believe we lost that game.

“Maybe opposing teams think we are fragile so they can let us have the ball because we are not scoring as many goals as we used to.

“They might look and say we are in a bad position but that might work for us.

“Our mindset has not changed. You can see we are confident in our ability because we are still playing well.

“We are missing maybe five per cent. One goal could change a lot of things. If we had taken the three points (against Blackburn) on Saturday it would have been a huge boost for us.

“We need the fans to back us and help us find that five per cent.

“Sometimes when you counter-attack or you find momentum, the crowd can be a big boost. They helped us on Saturday and we came so close to the win.

“We could not have done more. On another day it might have been 2-0 so we must stick to our plan and the results will turn because the other team’s keeper cannot be the best player every week.”