West Brom moved up to fourth in the Premier League after coming from behind to defeat Fulham at the Hawthorns.
The Cottagers went in front early on when Scott Carson pushed Zoltan Gera's shot on to the post, only for it to bounce back against the goalkeeper and over the line.
But the Baggies were soon level through Youssouf Mulumbu before Marc-Antoine Fortune's goal turned things around in the 40th minute.
The result means the Baggies have now gone seven games unbeaten in all competitions as their impressive start to the season continues. Fulham, meanwhile, are still looking for an away league win, having not taken three points from a fixture on the road since the opening day of last season.
West Brom made the more positive start, with Chris Brunt drilling a low free-kick that Mark Schwarzer was equal to. Moments later Fortune chested down Brunt's cross in the box, turned and hit a shot that deflected behind for a corner. It was met by Jonas Olsson, who was unable to find any accuracy with his header.
Clint Dempsey hit back at the other end with a speculative effort that went wide and in the ninth minute, the visitors were ahead thanks to a slice of good luck.
Gera collected a pass from Moussa Dembele and unleashed a strike which Carson did well to tip against the post.
Unfortunately for Carson, the ball bounced back off the woodwork, against him and in, and although Gera made a point of not celebrating against his old club, it will go down as an own-goal.
Another former Baggies player, Diomansy Kamara, could have made it 2-0 soon after but saw his effort go just the wrong side of the post, and Gera then shot over the bar.
Just after the quarter-hour mark the hosts were level, though, as Brunt's through-ball evaded Fortune but was controlled by Mulumbu, who slotted it past Schwarzer.
Brede Hangeland then gave the ball away in a dangerous area but was swift to reclaim it from Jerome Thomas, and Olsson was on the end of another corner with a looping header that Stephen Kelly cleared off the line.
The home side were back in the ascendancy and with five minutes of the first half remaining, they took the lead. Thomas picked out Fortune from the by-line and the Frenchman passed the ball beyond Schwarzer and into the net.
It could have got even better for Roberto Di Matteo's men before the interval but James Morrison shot well off-target and Paul Scharner's header went into the side-netting.
West Brom emerged for the second period looking eager to extend their advantage and Morrison tried his luck again, with a similar outcome. Fortune then attempted to take advantage of another mistake by Hangeland, but over-ran the ball as he advanced towards Schwarzer.
Di Matteo made a double substitution, withdrawing Fortune and Olsson for Roman Bednar and Pablo Ibanez, and Gabriel Tamas connected with a corner but could do little to send it in the right direction. Andy Johnson came on for Fulham in place of Kamara to make his first appearance since January, but it remained one-way traffic, with Bednar hoisting the ball over Schwarzer and in only to be flagged offside.
Morrison then received the ball by the far post but lost his footing as he tried to poke it past Schwarzer, and Scharner's shot drew a good save out of the Australian goalkeeper as the hosts continued to pile on the pressure.
Baggies fans cried out for a penalty when Thomas appeared to have his shirt pulled by Kelly, but referee Kevin Friend waved play on.
West Brom then sprung an attack direct from Carson's long kick, with Morrison racing on to it and prodding the ball across Schwarzer but wide.
Fulham had a glimpse of a chance when Carson flapped at a cross, but the ball was cleared away. Moments later Johnson narrowly failed to get a touch on a delivery that flew across the box.
The former Everton frontman was then unable to get a shot in while tracked by Ibanez and the hosts remained solid up to the final whistle to claim the victory.
West Brom boss Roberto Di Matteo says he has "absolutely no idea" how long his side can maintain their impressive form after climbing to fourth place in the Premier League.
"We will just try to play game by game, to improve and not concede a goal sometimes for a change!" he said.
"Then we will see at the end of the season where we stand.
"There is no secret - it is just hard work. The players dedicate a lot of their time to the training and transfer it to the pitch on a Saturday.
"We work hard as a team and we enjoy what we do. We try to play football and we believe that is the way to win games. It is quite simple actually. To analyse the game today, we didn't concede too many chances to Fulham, we put them under some enormous pressure at times and we created plenty of chances to win the game. We were worthy winners today."
Di Matteo had not seen a replay of the hosts' two goals, which Fulham manager Mark Hughes claimed should both have been disallowed for offside.
"We were disappointed with the two decisions to give the goals that West Brom scored," Hughes said. "From our point of view we felt that on both occasions players were in offside positions and therefore the goals shouldn't have been given.
"But there you go - that is two weeks running that we have had key decisions and key moments in matches go against us. We have had another example today, so we are disappointed.
"Certainly I felt at 1-0 we were good value for that and were playing some good stuff. We made a change in terms of our shape today because we had a lot of personnel missing and I think initially it worked really well for us.
"But to lose two goals and having to then chase the game, it makes things difficult because we are the away side and the home side are very good and very organised.
"They have guys who will throw their heads in and scrap and fight and in the end we didn't have enough to ask enough questions of them."
Hughes felt particularly aggrieved about West Brom's second goal, where Fortune was deemed by the match officials to be inactive while in an offside position as the Baggies attacked, but not when he finished the move by slotting the ball home.
"You are talking about an area of maybe 10 yards by 10 yards and apparently he is not active in the first instance, but is in the second instance," Hughes said. "I think we are all aware of the ambiguity of the law and areas that surround it.
"I just think it gives referees and officials an opportunity to hide behind something with decisions that they get incorrect. I think that has to change, but whether it will, I don't know."
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