Wolves

Wolverhampton Wanderers vs Arsenal – Match Preview

20th place Wolves take on the League leaders Arsenal on Wednesday night, who will be looking to return to winning ways in the Premier League. The last time these sides met was only in December. Johnstone scored an own goal to put Arsenal in front after 70 minutes, but in the 90th minute, Tolu scored to equalise for the away side, however, in the 4th minute of additional time, Mosquera also put the ball in the back of his own net to give Arsenal all 3 points. Both sides come into this fixture off the back of victories in the FA Cup. Wolves beat League 2 outfit Grimsby Town 1-0 courtesy of a goal from Bueno on the hour mark. The Gunners come into this fixture off the back of a comfortable 4-0 home win against Wigan, with all 4 goals coming in the opening 27 minutes. Madueke, Martinelli, an own goal from Hunt and a lovely chip from Jesus put Arsenal through to the 5th round. In the Premier League, Wolves have struggled to say the very least. The Wanderers have only picked up 9 points from 26 games, and in those 26 games, conceded 48 and only scored 16 times. Unsurprisingly, Wolves have the worst home record in the division, only picking up 5 points at the Molineux from a possible 39. On the other hand, Mikel Arteta’s men have enjoyed a sensational campaign thus far in every competition. The North London outfit sit 4 points clear at the top of the Premier League, finished 1st in the Champions League group phase, recently qualified for the League Cup Final, where they will face Manchester City, and comfortably progressed through to the 5th round of the FA Cup. The Gunners have been solid away from home in the Premier League, picking up 25 points from a possible 39, which is the best record of any side in the division thus far. Wolfe on Wolves’ win against Grimsby: “We’re very happy. We obviously knew it was not going to be pretty, and we would not be able to play the football we want to play, so it was just a battle about doing the basics in football the best. We did better in the second half, we suffered quite a bit in the first half, but second half we were much better and I think we made the best of it. “Progressing is all it was about today. We knew that it wasn’t going to be a game like the last one in the FA Cup against Shrewsbury. We knew it was going to be tough and that we’d have to fight very hard, and I’m happy that we stood up to it.” On Arsenal: “It’s an important, and big challenge. They [Arsenal] are first in the table, but we made it very difficult for them a couple of weeks ago, and I believe we can do that again.” Mikel Arteta on Eze: “Eberechi Eze was really positive, that’s what we want. He’s already playing a big role, he’s played a lot of games for us and he will continue to. Those players need those moments. It’s good for the mood, the confidence.” On Norgaard’s performance vs Wigan: “Very pleased and not surprised. The way he looks after himself and every teammate, and how he handles the role, is just exceptional. I’m not surprised by what he’s done today.”

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Wolves 1-4 Man Utd: Amorim’s side impose eighth straight defeat on struggling hosts

Wolves 1-4 Manchester United Bellegarde (45’+2)    Bruno Fernandes (25′, 82′ pen) Mbeumo (51′) Mount (62′) A Bruno Fernandes double inspired Manchester United to a comfortable victory against lowly Wolves, who remain rooted to the bottom of the Premier League table. The visitors opened the scoring in the 25th minute, courtesy of some slack Wolves defending. Casemiro latched onto a loose Andre ball in the home side’s half, the ball was worked from Matheus Cunha to Fernandes, who converted past Sam Johnstone. It was a shambolic goal to concede from the host’s perspective, and set the tone for another difficult Molineux night. Rob Edwards side would reply on the half time mark. Jean-Ricner Bellegarde, who could face Scotland in the World Cup next summer for Haiti, turned in a David Moller Wolfe cross to level proceedings. The Red Devils dominated the second period, scoring three goals in a clinical spell. Diogo Dalot exposed Wolves’ high line, and after marauding towards Johnstone’s goal, he squared for the onrushing Bryan Mbuemo to tap home. Mason Mount added a third after the hour mark. Fernandes turned provider, floating a chipped pass to expose the home defence, Mount met the cross, volleying past the helpless Johnstone with his right foot. Fernandes sealed victory in the 82nd minute from the penalty spot. Yerson Mosquera’s handball was rightly penalised by Michael Salisbury, and the United captain finished emphatically in the bottom right corner. The win moves Amorim’s side to sixth place, who have lost one of their previous nine league matches. Wolves remain firmly fixed to the bottom of the Premier League table. New manager Rob Edwards is yet to register a point since his move from Middlesborough last month. Wolves: Johnstone, Mosquera, Agbadou, Toti Gomes (Bueno 70′) Krejcí, Andre, Hoever (Tchatchoua 86′) Moller Wolfe, Arias (Mané 70′) Strand Larsen (Arokodare 69′) Bellegarde (López 54′) Manchester United: Lammens, Mazraoui (Martínez 69′) Heaven (Yoro 69′) Shaw, Amad, Casemiro (Mainoo 78′) Fernandes, Dalot (Dorgu 84′) Mbeumo, Mount (Zirkzee 84′) Matheus Cunha

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