West Ham boss Sam Allardyce has tipped Andy Carroll to book himself a World Cup adventure after helping to fire his club to the brink of Barclays Premier League safety.

The 25-year-old former Newcastle frontman headed the Hammers into an early lead at Sunderland and turned in a fine individual display as Allardyce's men ran out 2-1 winners at the Stadium of Light.

Victory on Wearside left the men from Upton Park 11 points clear of the drop zone with just six games to play, but left Carroll with a new target ahead of him.

Asked if there was enough football left for the frontman to force his way into Roy Hodgson's England squad, Allardyce said: "I think there is.

"There are six games to go and I think if he continues to score, if he scores anything like he did last season - he scored eight in the last 12, I think - if he gets another two or three or four goals, I think it will hopefully be difficult for Roy to ignore him.

"There are not a lot of them today, unfortunately. I used to play against them every week, Andy Carrolls, when I played many years ago. There used to be one in every side "But there's a quality with the size and the stature of the man. It's not just a heading ability, it's an all-round quality that he has.

"He's quicker than he looks, some good hold-up play off the chest at times, takes the ball with his feet, he's got a terrific shot on him.

"He's superb in the air and he's young, so hopefully he keeps on not growing stature-wise, but growing in terms of his experience and his ability to stay fit and be an even better player than he already is."

The Hammers looked to be cruising when, after Carroll had headed them into a ninth-minute lead, Mohamed Diame doubled their advantage fives minutes into the second half.

However, substitute Adam Johnson gave Sunderland, who saw strong appeals for a first-half penalty turned down, hope when he pulled a goal back 25 minutes from time to prompt a late assault.

But although Ki Sung-yueng, Connor Wickham, Fabio Borini and substitute Ignacio Scocco went close, the visitors held out to all but secure their own top-flight status.

Allardyce, who was booed by his own club's fans after last week's 2-1 victory over 10-man Hull, was a satisfied man as he left the north-east.

He said: "We have won six of the last nine matches, we are probably in the top four or five in the Premier League for results at the moment.

"It got us out of trouble and it's got us almost safe - not quite mathematically, but I think it would be difficult for anybody to catch us now."