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Latest updates

  1. Shi has made 'good start' repairing 'fractured relationship'published at 18:14 GMT 27 March

    Mike Taylor
    BBC Radio WM reporter

    Wolves' interim executive chairman Nathan ShiImage source, Getty Images

    "We are changing the way we do things at Wolves. It must always be football first and around that we are building greater clarity, accountability and longer-term thinking to create a better future" - Nathan Shi, who is still officially interim executive chairman, said in a recent statement.

    You, like me, might have grown up thinking that being "football first" ought to be so intrinsic to a football club that there would be no need to actually state it, let alone revert to it, but perhaps we are products of a simpler age.

    However, starting from a "football first" standpoint sounds like a good lodestar - and this is no time to be churlish.

    Many Wolves fans ran through the stages of grief for their Premier League status quite early. Though the moment will still hurt when it comes - let us also make room for the possibility, however slim, that it won't come - the most intense anger associated with relegation may have already passed.

    But there is a moment of opportunity here.

    Like every other aspect of Wolves' probable demotion, the fracturing of the relationship between the owners Fosun and the supporters is not a product of this season alone.

    Fans revered Fosun's name in the early years after the takeover; now they take it in vain. Much of the anger was directed personally at previous chairman Jeff Shi, and the appointment of Nathan Shi as his replacement in December was greeted with a lot of eye-rolling.

    But the relationship is not beyond repair and Fosun continue to insist their interest remains long-term.

    Nathan Shi's statement spoke of a "responsibility to them to put the right structures in place at Wolves so we can build something we are proud of again". His lack of previous football experience need not prevent him from succeeding.

    Organising the right people into key positions, and taking care to ensure supporters feel invested in and respected by the club, matter more.

    Announcing an average 25% cut in season-ticket prices and committing to regular meetings with the club's Fan Advisory Board and wider support forums are a good start.

    The Wolves Report podcast's Ryan Leister met Nathan Shi at one of the recent meetings. "What we stated was the things you're saying are great but these things are only going to become real, and you be believed and trusted, when words become actions," said Leister.

    Lost hearts and minds can be won back if the fans feel the club is listening and they can see that football is once again first. "If Nathan's saying it then great, but he has to keep showing us," Leister added.

    Tune into The West Midlands Football Phone-In from 18:00 on weeknights

    Explore Wolves content on BBC Sounds

  2. Watch: West Midlands Football Phone-Inpublished at 17:52 GMT 27 March

    A graphic showing the club badges of Aston Villa, Birmingham City, Walsall, West Bromwich Albion and Wolverhampton Wanderers

    Former Aston Villa and West Bromwich Albion striker Garry Thompson joins Steve Hermon in the studio for Friday's phone-in.

    The show runs from 18:00-19:00 GMT and you can listen again on BBC Sounds afterwards - find all episodes here.

    And get involved by calling 08081 009956 - or text 81333, starting your message with WM.

    Watch here

  3. No VAR error but Brentford denied penalty v Wolves - panelpublished at 13:52 GMT 26 March

    Dale Johnson
    Football issues correspondent

    Kevin Schade of Brentford looks on during the Premier League match against Leeds UnitedImage source, Getty Images

    The Premier League's Key Match Incidents Panel has ruled that Brentford should have been awarded a penalty in their 2-2 home draw with Wolves on 16 March.

    But it was also decided that the VAR was correct not to intervene as there was no clear and obvious error.

    The Bees were 2-0 up in the 41st minute when Kevin Schade was held back by Andre.

    Referee Stuart Attwell allowed play to continue and there was no monitor review advised by the VAR, Paul Howard.

    Wolves came back strongly in the second half to score twice and earn a point at the Gtech.

    The KMI Panel said that the holding was "sustained" and voted 4:1 in favour of a penalty.

    It was a split 3:2 vote in support of no VAR intervention.

  4. How will Wolves handle 'strange' 25-day break?published at 07:04 GMT 24 March

    Dazzling Dave
    Fan writer

    Wolverhampton Wanderers fan's voice banner
    Rob Edwards applaudsImage source, PA Media

    Wolves going into a 25-day break with no match is one of the strangest situations of the season.

    In a campaign packed with games, injuries, pressure and emotional swings, a pause this long can feel both helpful and harmful at the same time.

    There is a clear upside. After a heavy schedule, the lads finally get a chance to breathe. They can spend time with their families, switch off mentally and recharge physically.

    At this stage of the season, that matters. Fresh legs and fresh minds could make a real difference in the run-in. For those away with their international sides, there is also a chance to build confidence, get minutes and come back sharper.

    But there is another side to it - and it is the one many Wolves fans will worry about most.

    Wolves were beginning to build some momentum, not just in results but in performances too. There were signs the team was finding rhythm, belief and a bit more control. To stop that flow now feels frustrating.

    Rob Edwards summed it up perfectly when he said: "It's mad, isn't it?" He also called it "strange" to have 25 days with no game.

    And he is right. We have seen long breaks before because of Covid and the World Cup winter break, but those pauses affected everyone. This one is different. This time it is only Wolves dealing with it.

    That makes the challenge even bigger for the coaching staff. The good news is they are trying to manage it properly, with friendlies planned to keep players sharp and avoid too much drop-off.

    If Wolves handle this break well, keep the momentum alive and return focused, there is a real chance to make it count.

    This pause can either drain Wolves' progress or fuel their run-in. It is up to them now.

    Find more from Dazzling Dave at Always Wolves, external

  5. 'It was a pleasure to be involved with McCarthy'published at 15:19 GMT 23 March

    Mick McCarthy managing WolvesImage source, Getty Images

    Former Wolves captain Jody Craddock has spoken to BBC Radio WM about his journey to Molineux, relegation, promotion and his time under Mick McCarthy - who he says is "one of the best managers I have had the privilege to be coached by".

    "His recruitment was fantastic," Craddock added the former centre-back.

    "He brought in some really good young players, and he had me as the 'older head'. He and the scouting team saw something in them that was potentially good enough to take us in to the Premier League. What a big ask that is."

    Hit play below to hear more from Craddock or listen on BBC Sounds here

    Media caption,

  6. Which side has suffered most from Premier League injuries this season?published at 11:59 GMT 19 March

    Martin Odegaard of Arsenal goes down with an injuryImage source, Getty Images

    We are getting to the stage of the season where every Premier League team is managing injuries in their squad as the sheer volume and intensity of games begins to take its toll.

    But who has been most affected by injuries across the campaign so far?

    Ben Dinnery, from Premier Injuries Limited, has provided the data below, showing the number of domestic injuries each top-flight team has suffered, defined by a player missing at least one Premier League game.

    The data has been taken from the opening weekend up to and including 18 March.

    Domestic injuries for each Premier League team this season

    Despite this table listing domestic injuries, it is unsurprising that the top three of Arsenal, Chelsea and Aston Villa have all competed in European competition, with the Gunners still fighting on four fronts and the Blues also coming off the back of a much-shortened pre-season following their Club World Cup victory.

    Perhaps more surprisingly, however, is the fact Arsenal's 31 domestic injuries so far comfortably leads the way, illustrating the strength and depth available to Mikel Arteta to still have his side nine points clear at the top of the table.

    The graphic below shows Tottenham lead the way for days missed by injured players, illustrating the issues faced by Thomas Frank, who had to cope with long-term absentees including Dejan Kulusevski and James Maddison.

    Days missed with domestic injuries this season

    Both West Ham and Brentford are in the bottom three for domestic injuries and days missed through those injuries, while Arsenal and Villa are in the top three for both.

    Chelsea drop down the table when looking at days missed, showing they have predominately suffered from short absences spread throughout the squad.

    It is worth pointing out that Newcastle's two longest absences this season - Emil Krafth (120 days) and Yoane Wissa (88 days), who had not yet even trained with his new side, resulted from injuries picked up on international duty and are not factored into the figures.

  7. 'Not a one-season story'published at 08:23 GMT 18 March

    Mike Taylor
    BBC Radio WM reporter

    Adam ArmstrongImage source, Getty Images

    "The quality that we have, you see it every day in training," said Adam Armstrong after Monday's draw at Brentford. "I couldn't quite believe the position in the table."

    Armstrong joined Wolves on deadline day, at which point they were 18 points from safety with 14 games left to play. Halfway through those matches, the deficit has been trimmed to 12. It is not enough progress to make the prospect of somehow tunnelling out of the relegation zone seem any less fanciful.

    His observations are, however, a useful indicator of progress. Whether this Wolves squad was ever properly equipped for this season is now moot. But we can now say that, even after selling three players for more than £80m mid-season, they look like a team that believe they can compete at this level.

    Armstrong agrees. "You see it in the second halves of games," he said. "You see the lads sticking together. The fans are right behind us. It gives us that extra push. We could hear them all game, especially in the second half when were pushing for another goal. We have to take the positives to go on to the next one."

    It was possible to see Armstrong's signing on 2 February as the start of Wolves' 2026-27 season, bringing in for reasonable cost a player proven to meet the very specific demands of the Championship. But there is more to preparing for an expected relegation than just scouting and signing players.

    Few clubs have ever had so long to brace themselves for impact as Wolves in recent months, but we can now see that rather than writing off the remainder of this campaign and just waiting it out, positive vibes are being generated by successive performances.

    That matters, even if at least some of the players generating them will be playing somewhere else by the time next season begins. The supporters feeling those vibes, at Molineux and on the road, will not have moved, and Wolves will need them.

    Supporting a football club does not stop and start with new seasons. Feelings, good and bad, linger. Wolves' likely relegation is not a one-season story. The contributing factors have come together over time, and the same will be true of any future promotion back to the Premier League.

    If the objective of ensuring Wolves are a Premier League club on 1 August 2027 is met, on that date we will reflect that the successful campaign to achieve it started before now.

    Tune into The West Midlands Football Phone-In from 18:00 on weeknights

    Explore Wolves content on BBC Sounds

  8. 'The table is talking about what we are'published at 14:47 GMT 17 March

    Dazzling Dave
    Fan writer

    Wolverhampton Wanderers fan's voice banner
    Rob Edwards applauds the travelling Wolves fansImage source, Getty Images

    The Brentford draw felt like a snapshot of Wolves' season. A slow start, a mountain to climb, then a late surge of belief.

    The second-half response was everything you want from a side in trouble. Wolves were tenacious, confident, and played with conviction. The fightback did not feel like blind hope, it felt like intent. It showed there is spirit in this group, and it showed there is quality too.

    That is why Jamie Carragher's line on Monday Night Football has stuck with me: "I've been saying this for a few weeks now, they are not the worst team in the Premier League, they are not."

    Watching that second half, it was hard to disagree.

    But football is cruelly simple. Carragher is talking about what he sees. The table is talking about what we are. Mathematically, survival might still be technically possible, but with so few matches left it feels like an impossible dream.

    That is what made the first half so painful. We were passive, loose in our shape, and second to too many second balls. Brentford's first goal was a quality strike, the kind you almost have to applaud, but the bigger issue was what happened before it. We lost our man in the box and switched off for a split second. At this level, that is enough and before we know it we are 2-0 down.

    This was not just a slow start in a single game. It is the story of the season. Wolves are starting to play with freedom and confidence when the stakes are at their highest and the time is at its shortest.

    So what does it say about the psychology of the team? Do we start too cautious? Do we only play with freedom once there is nothing to lose? Either way, it is a pattern, and patterns define seasons.

    The second half at Brentford yet again proved Wolves have fight. Now it feels just like the game, too late to save our season. But at least we have our pride back.

    Find more from Dazzling Dave at Always Wolves, external

  9. Brentford 2-2 Wolves - the fans' verdictpublished at 13:16 GMT 17 March

    Your opinions graphic

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    We asked for your thoughts after Monday's Premier League game between Brentford and Wolves.

    Here are some of your comments:

    Brentford fans

    Les: Did not learn anything from the Burnley game. Andrews too late with the subs. How can Brentford think of Europe when they are struggling to fill the subs bench?

    Matt: We knew it was coming… Comfortable for much of the first half, two good goals in the bag - but letting that goal in before half time, you could just sense that Wolves were going to come out with more belief and we did not adjust accordingly. Love Keith, but not sure the subs were right today. On the plus-side, great to see Kayode get his first Brentford goal. Well played to Wolves though, showing real fighting spirit in the face of impending doom.

    George: The engine's fallen out of our season at this point - we need the international break to put ourselves back together. We can't seem to play two good halves at the moment, and the second half of this one had shades of our hairy 3-4 win at Burnley but without a now injured Damsgaard to save our hides.

    Zachary: We are really missing Janelt. It is clear that Henderson is not up to pace, and his balls over the top are becoming far too predictable. Our midfield was pretty much not existent at times and that was massively exposed during Wolves first goal, and their player was allowed to walk the length of the pitch. Need that midfield anchor. Poor changes from Keith Andrews too, bringing on Yarmo for Schade and Ajer for Damsgaard - pretty much going to a back five and inviting Wolves to score. We go again on Saturday. UP THE BEES.

    Wolves fans

    Stanley: Great second half when Angel Gomes came on in place of Mane, the lad is not playing well right now with too many mistakes - but he will learn from that. Our first half was not that good and we allowed two goals by not doing basic defensive work. We got lucky with Armstrong's goal because that was a back pass, but we take any luck we get. Tolu looked strong and determined to do the job coming on as sub and his header got us the point. He could have got us three if the cross bar was not in the way! We can't stay up but we can give a fight of it .

    Wol: Good performance after a terrible 35 minutes at the start. We showed a great spirit second half and the atmosphere was terrific throughout from the fans. Well worth the long day to see us tonight.

    Rhys: We did fantastically to get back into the game - just a shame that we didn't go on and win it.

    Dan: It was a good game of football. The referee got a bit trigger-happy awarding free kicks towards the end, which stopped the flow of the game and maybe dented either side's chances. But overall we'd happily take the point from 2-0 down. Keep fighting lads.

  10. Edwards gives Wolves more reasons to be cheerfulpublished at 11:24 GMT 17 March

    Adam Armstrong celebrates with Mateus ManeImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Adam Armstrong scored his first Wolves goal since his January move from Southampton

    "It was looking like everything was just falling apart. It's not looking like that now."

    Rob Edwards' post-match news conference at Brentford on Monday was straightforward but a few lines still resonated.

    It was another battling performance, a second comeback from 2-0 down in the last six games, and further evidence of the unit Wolves are becoming under Edwards.

    Seven of his 12 defeats came during the club's 12-match losing run as Edwards battled to install his philosophy after replacing Vitor Pereira midway through the streak.

    Since then it is five losses in 16 games in all competitions, a run which has left Wolves mid-table in the Premier League form book.

    The recovery has come too late and the 12-point gap to safety will be too great to close with just seven games left.

    Wolves have delayed relegation, which looked inevitable even in October, as Edwards and his staff get to grips with the squad to change the direction.

    Part of Edwards' brief was to restore fight, belief and pride and he has done that, despite winning only five of his 23 games.

    Wolves may still be going down but they are not falling apart, with cause to be optimistic.

  11. Brentford 2-2 Wolves: What Edwards saidpublished at 08:06 GMT 17 March

    Media caption,

    Wolves boss Rob Edwards, speaking to BBC Match of the Day: "Really, really pleased and proud. To be 2-0 down, I didn't feel we deserved it, but we were, so credit to Brentford. I thought we made a couple of errors and got punished. I felt we were playing really well.

    "We showed a lot of belief and quality as well, but great fighting spirit to keep going and get to a point in the game where I felt we could go on and win it. Unfortunately, it wasn't to be, but I'm really proud of the performance overall.

    On Adam Armstrong's goal: "It gave us belief. The lads felt that we were right in the game as well, so having that goal certainly helped. Then it wasn't a case of changing too much structurally [at half-time], changed a little bit personnel wise, and then we controlled big spells of that second half."

    On the back pass before the goal: "I've just seen it now in another interview and, yes, it looks that way. I think he felt there was a nick on it at the time, but if we've got away with that one, then we'll certainly take it. Of course, a lot has happened then to get to the goal, but maybe that has gone for us."

    On the fight: "The players are, and we owe it to the football club, ourselves, the fans to keep fighting all the way until the 38th game, so we'll do that. We spoke a lot today about the impact the subs can have from the side, and they have been in recent weeks, whether that is scoring goals or having a big impact, and we got that again tonight. All the lads that came on were really effective. It is a squad game. Really pleased for Tolu, but all the lads were great."

    On West Ham after the break: "We know that's a big game, they all are. We'll get some time off, and then it will be a mixture of good training weeks and a friendly in there as well to make sure we prepare for the right way. We've never had a 25-day break in the season before, so it will be a new one for all of us."

    Did you know?

    • Wolves have come back to draw on each of the last two occasions they've found themselves 2+ goals down in a Premier League game (also v Arsenal in February), after losing on each of the previous 22 occasions they were two or more down before that.

    Media caption,

    Edwards: 'Proud of the fight from the players'

  12. Wolves analysis: Fighting spirit epitomises improvementpublished at 22:44 GMT 16 March

    Nick Mashiter
    Football reporter

    Wolverhampton Wanderers' Adam Armstrong celebrates scoring his side's first goal with team mate Jean-Ricner BellegardImage source, Getty Images

    Wolves may be going down but they are going down with a fight.

    For the second time in six games Rob Edwards' side came from 2-0 down to earn a deserved point.

    The first time it was against champions-elect Arsenal and, on Monday, Wolves proved their fightbacks are not down to luck.

    Two defeats in eight games in all competitions show the improvement under Edwards and they were well worth a point at the Gtech Community Stadium.

    It was a timid first-half display until Adam Armstrong's goal just before the beak gave them a lifeline which they built on in the second half.

    The players have rallied to Edwards' call to remain committed to the cause and he has fostered the unity which was leaving Molineux before his November arrival.

    Wolves are running out of games, with just seven left, and they are 12 points from safety having played a match more than their rivals.

    It will be a fight they will ultimately lose but Edwards has fulfilled the brief from when he replaced Vitor Pereira.

    He has restored hope and desire within the squad and the fanbase and, despite impending relegation, Wolves can look to the future with some optimism.

  13. Brentford v Wolves: Team newspublished at 19:03 GMT 16 March

    BBC SPORT
1
Kelleher
33
Kayode
4
van den Berg
6
22
Collins
1
23
Lewis-Potter
Henderson
8
Jensen
1
19
Ouattara
24
Damsgaard
7
Schade
16
9
Igor Thiago
BRENTFORD Lineup

    Sepp van den Berg and Mathias Jensen return for Brentford as they look to close the gap to the top five.

    Kristoffer Ajer and Yehor Yarmoliuk drop to the bench following the Bees' FA Cup exit at West Ham.

    Keith Andrews' side - currently seventh in the Premier League - will move just two points behind fifth-placed Liverpool with victory.

    Brentford XI: Kelleher, Lewis-Potter, Collins, Van Den Berg, Kayode, Jensen, Henderson, Damsgaard, Schade, Thiago, Ouattara.

    Subs: Valdimarsson, Pinnock, Yarmoliuk, Nelson, Ajer, Donovan, Furo, Bentt, Shield.

    Wolves boss Rob Edwards makes four changes for their trip to west London.

    Jose Sa, Ladislav Krejci, Andre and Adam Armstrong return for Wolves, bottom of the Premier League and looking to stage an improbable push for survival.

    Toti Gomes, Angel Gomes and Tolu Arokodare drop to the bench, while goalkeeper Sam Johnstone is not in the squad.

    Wolves XI: Sa, Tchatchoua, Mosquera, S Bueno, Krejci, H Bueno, Andre, J Gomes, Bellegarde, Mane, Armstrong.Subs: Bentley, Lima, Doherty, Toti, Wolfe, A Gomes, R Gomes, Hwang, Arokodare.

    Subs: Bentley, Gomes, Arokodare, Pedro Lima, Doherty, Toti Gomes, Hwang Hee-Chan, Rodrigo Gomes, Moller Wolfe

    BBC
SPORT
1
José Sá
15
Mosquera
4
Santiago Bueno
37
Krejcí
38
Tchatchoua
27
Bellegarde
7
André
8
João Gomes
3
Hugo Bueno
9
Armstrong
36
Mané
WOLVES LINEUP
  14. Sutton's predictions: Brentford v Wolvespublished at 08:10 GMT 16 March

    Chris Sutton smiling on a yellow and black background with 'Sutton's predictions' written below his face

    Wolves have picked up but they are still the only Premier League side without an away win this season.

    I don't see that changing here. Keith Andrews has done a brilliant job at Brentford and although they are out of the FA Cup they are still doing really well in the league.

    Sutton's prediction: 2-1

    Read the full predictions and have your say here

  15. Brentford v Wolves: Key stats and talking pointspublished at 13:59 GMT 15 March

    Chris Adams
    BBC Sport journalist

    Brentford will be looking to bounce back from their FA Cup penalty shootout heartache when they welcome bottom side Wolverhampton Wanderers to west London on Monday (20:00 GMT).

    Dango unblamed

    Keith Andrews' side crashed out of the cup at the fifth-round stage against West Ham United, but the head coach was quick to defend Dango Ouattara after the Burkina Faso winger's attempt at a Panenka failed miserably.

    "He practises that technique a lot and will have the utmost support from me and everyone around," said the Irishman. No wonder his side have been running through brick walls for him all season.

    The Bees sit seventh, well placed in the hunt for a European spot, largely thanks to 18-goal striker Igor Thiago's blistering form in front of goal. Ouattara has played his part in the support cast, chipping in with five, while Kevin Schade has seven.

    Perhaps because of Thiago's style – he's made more runs into the opposition box (151) than any other player in the Premier League this season – Brentford have scored a higher percentage of their goals from inside the penalty area than any other team in the top flight.

    This table lists the six clubs with the highest share of goals being scored from inside the penalty box in the 2025-26 Premier League season. Brentford are top with 43 of their 44 goals (98%) coming from inside the box.

    After winning seven and losing just one of their first 11 league home games this season, Brentford have since lost two of their past three at Gtech Community Stadium. The Bees haven't suffered successive home league defeats since February 2025.

    …And out come the Wolves

    It may have taken until March but Wolverhampton Wanderers have finally won back-to-back league games. They have done it the hard way too, defeating two of the top six in Aston Villa and Liverpool, the latter of whom responded by dumping them out of the FA Cup three days later.

    While Wolves remain rooted to the bottom and highly likely to go down, those victories have taken them well clear of Derby County's record for the lowest Premier League points total.

    With that particular monkey off their backs, Rob Edwards' side can perhaps attack their remaining eight games of the season with a little less trepidation. A first league away win at the 15th attempt would be a good way to start.

    Portuguese wing-back Rodrigo Gomes has emerged as something of a super sub in recent games, coming off the bench to score in those successive wins.

    Four of his five league goals for Wolves have come as a substitute, including all three this season. Of all the players who have scored five or more goals in the competition's history, only two have netted a higher share from the bench than Gomes.

    This table shows the all-time Premier League players with the highest share of goals as a substitute (minimum of five goals). Wolverhampton Wanderers' Rodrigo Gomes is joint-third with four of his five goals coming off the bench.

    A double from Keane Lewis-Potter gave Brentford all three points at Molineux in December. Wolves are winless in their past four against this opposition, shipping 10 goals in the process.

    No side at the bottom of the table on each matchday has won three consecutive top-flight games since Leicester City in 2015. If Wolves can match that feat, perhaps they can start dreaming of the great escape...