Gary Rowett needs to shake up his selections in attack if Leicester City is to survive in the Championship.
Indeed, it's clear at this point in time, that the duo of Patson Daka and Jordan Ayew are stale beyond repair, with Rowett surely at his wit's end with the Zambian, after his shambolic penalty miss versus Watford.
With only eight Championship goals between this campaign, the under pressure manager must be scrambling for some alternative options, ahead of second tier action returning after the international break.
He could do a lot worse than try to gift some of Leicester's bright next generation some starting chances, with whirlwind youngster Lorenz Hutchinson surely one figure Rowett has been seriously impressed by, when casting an eye over youngsters developing at the King Power.
With a staggering 27 goals and assists for the U18s and U21s this season, Hutchinson has also embarked on a new journey with the England U18s over the break, and succeeded with flying colours.
Scoring an instinctive rebound on his national team debut, the 18-year-old starlet could be about to prove the notion 'age is just a number' resoundingly true, if he shines in the senior picture shortly.
It's not just Hutchinson who has shone for the youthful Three Lions, with Jeremy Monga - who has been handed senior chances here and there this season - also featuring, alongside the teenager, for the England U18s.
While the current mood at the King Power is rightly dismal, it's clear there is a bright future on the horizon if all these starlets live up to their promise.
There is one youngster who isn't quite garnering the same attention as the Hutchinsons and the Mongas of this world, who Rowett might throw into his main side, as well, down the line.
Rowett could look to this unlikely star
Rowett has proven himself as a manager in the past who is unafraid to throw wide-eyed talents into the first-team spotlight, with Demarai Gray - before he became a Premier League regular - gaining his first chances in the men's game under Rowett's tutelage at Birmingham City.
Bismark Owusu will hope, in the years to come, that he's read off as another memorable star that was handed his first senior chances under the experienced EFL boss, with the 17-year-old sticking out as yet another exciting youngster rising the ranks.
Capable of playing as a winger down either flank, or as a central option as a number ten, Owusu might well explode into life in the senior fold very soon.
Seven goals and one assist have fallen into his lap this season in U18 Premier League action, with two of those strikes coming last time out, as the Foxes beat Southampton in a narrow 2-1 win.
With ten goals now next to his name for the U18s, the next step-up for Owusu will be in the U21s age bracket.
If the rapid ascents of Hutchinson and Monga are anything to go by, he will make light work of these hurdles.
Don't be surprised if Owusu becomes a sudden revelation in the first team scene imminently, with Rowett extremely short in the patience department, when it comes to several rotten senior faces.
