ALLOA WOMEN recorded their highest ever scoreline during the 13- 0 demolition job of Carron Huskies on Sunday.

The Wasps were back at home and welcome the Forth Valley side to the Recs, looking to get back to winning ways after their defeat last week.

Alloa were out with a point to prove and showcased their talent and ability from the off, punishing Carron Huskies by seven goals before they even reached half time.

It was more of the same for the Women as they came out the break intent on not sitting back, going on to add a further six goals to their already impressive tally.

Despite the high scoreline, manager Allan Milne said that he still expected more from his side and that they were always looking to improve.

“It was a weird one for me,” Milne said. “I was happy we won but I wasn’t fully pleased with the performance.

“It was brilliant to get the goals and some of the goals we scored were just brilliant and some of the football we played was fantastic.

“At times, we were a wee bit sloppy, made some of the wrong decisions at the wrong times and I felt we could’ve been a little bit more comfortable.

“It was hard to see when I looked at the stats and I saw we had 82 shots on goal but still only scored 13.

“That was where my disappointment was, we could’ve maybe been a little bit more clinical in the final third.

“No disrespect to Carron Huskies, full credit to them for continuing on and keeping going but I just felt like we could have done more.”

Alloa were hindered by low numbers once again, with a sizeable number of their squad out through injury or holiday.

It has been much of the same all season, with Milne looking to fill the bench as much as he can over the coming weeks.

He went on: “We had a lot of players out with injuries and that’s really hurting us just now – we were down to low numbers.

“They came in though, got the result they wanted and now sit top of the league on goal difference.

“We’re undefeated in the league at the moment, that keeps us going. Positives in getting the result but as a group, we could have kept the standards higher.”