WALES skipper Ashley Williams believes he could’ve won the Bosnia game for Wales and now he’s focusing on finishing the job against Cyprus.

Wales face Cyprus at Cardiff City Stadium with the prospect of making it seven points from three games which would keep them top of Group B.

And victory over fifth seeds Cyprus would see them head to Brussels to take on favourites Belgium in their best qualifying position for over a decade.

However, Wales missed a chance or two in their 0-0 draw with top seeds Bosnia and no better than Williams’ header from Gareth Bale’s cross.

“I was proud of our performance but it would have been nice to get the win,” said the Swansea City star. “I'm still reliving that chance over and over again,” Williams admitted in a Sunday morning press briefing.

“I can't relive it any more. I've watched it a million times. With my goalscoring record, I don't think anybody expected anything.

“But it was a great chance, it was the best chance and something that I need to improve on, I'm aware of that. I'm just kicking myself still.

“I guess I'm not there to score and that's what Ben Davies tried to tell me after the game to pick me up.

“We did keep a clean sheet, which is what I live for, so that's pleasing, that's my job.

“And I think as a group we're happy with the performance, especially against a tough team that put a lot of pressure on us at times, we really stuck together and dealt with that threat.

“Now we want to go and follow it up against Cyprus. Anything other than the three points now and it doesn't look as good as it would go, so if we can finish the first three games with seven points that would be a great return.

“Hopefully the fans have heard and saw how much we needed them, especially when your legs are getting a bit tired, they were pushing on and we were under pressure and the fans just gave us that extra lift.

"It was the best crowd that I've ever played in front of for Wales, definitely. They were behind us the entire game."