Sports

Wolves 2 – 0 C Palace



Wolves moved away from relegation danger and level with Crystal Palace following a tense 2-0 win over the Eagles at Molineux.

Ruben Neves’ right-wing corner ricocheted into the net off the legs of Palace defender Joachim Andersen early in the game and the Wolves captain sealed the win from the penalty spot in stoppage-time after Sam Johnstone’s foul on Pedro Neto.

The in-form away side pushed for an equaliser for long periods of the second half with Eberechi Eze twice going close as nerves jangled inside Molineux. But some desperate defending was enough for Wolves to cling on, the pressure lifted late on by the penalty.

The victory, a third in four games for the team that were bottom of the Premier League table at Christmas when Julen Lopetegui took charge, moves Wolves up one place to 13th. More significantly, it takes them well clear of the relegation zone.

Player ratings

Wolves: Sa (8), Semedo (6), Dawson (8), Kilman (7), Bueno (8), Neves (9), Lemina (7), Nunes (6), Hwang (7), Cunha (6), Costa (7).

Subs: Gomes (6), Toti (5), Traore (6), Collins (n/a), Neto (n/a).

Crystal Palace: Johnstone (4), Richards (6), Guehi (6), Andersen (4), Mitchell (6), Lokonga (6), Milivojevic (6), Hughes (6), Ayew (6), Eze (7), Olise (7).

Subs: Ward (6), Schlupp (6), Edouard (6), Mateta (n/a).

Player of the match: Ruben Neves.

How Wolves won it at Molineux

The pressure had been on Wolves going into the game with Lopetegui urging the home crowd to help raise his players after they were beaten by Leicester on Saturday. Their chances may have been helped by the changes made by Roy Hodgson.

The Palace boss pointed to a packed schedule in making four changes to the team, handing rare starts to Will Hughes and Luka Milivojevic. Perhaps that impacted their fluency in the early stages because Wolves’ strong start put them in control from the outset.

The restored Hugo Bueno raided down the left throughout and it was from his cross that the lively Diego Costa forced the corner from which Wolves opened the scoring. Costa has scored only goal since arriving at the club but his presence has become a real asset.

Team news

Julen Lopetegui made three changes to the team that lost at Leicester with Ruben Neves returning in place of Joao Gomes, while Hugo Bueno replaced Toti Gomes at left-back and Hwang Hee-chan came in for Pablo Sarabia.

Roy Hodgson made four changes to his Crystal Palace team. Two of them mirrored the changes made in the second half against Everton with Will Hughes in for Odsonne Edouard and Luka Milivojevic in for Cheick Doucoure. The others to come in were Albert Lokongo and Chris Richards.

Palace’s in-form players began to have an influence as the game wore on, Michael Olise probing and Eberechi Eze fizzing a shot towards goal. It was Albert Lokonga who had the best chance of the first half – his effort being kept out by the left hand of Jose Sa.

As Wolves retreated, tensions rose and Eze had further attempts from distance that had the home crowd anxious. But Johnstone’s poor touch in stoppage-time led to an over-the-top challenge on substitute Neto that could easily have seen the goalkeeper sent off.

Neves beat him from the spot anyway, sending supporters in the Sir Jack Hayward Stand behind the goal into relief-fuelled delirium. It has been a challenging season for both of these teams. Both can now surely look forward to giving it another go next time around.

FPL Stats: Wolves 2-0 Crystal Palace

Goals Neves
Assists Neves, Neto
Own goals Andersen
Bonus points Neves (3), Sa (2), Bueno (1)

What’s next?

Wolves head to Brighton on Saturday in the Premier League with kick-off at 3pm.

Crystal Palace also play again in four days’ time when they host West Ham at Selhurst Park. Kick-off 12.30pm.

Wolves’ remaining fixtures

April 29: Brighton (A) – Premier League, kick-off 3pm

May 6: Aston Villa (H) – Premier League, kick-off 3pm

May 13: Man Utd (A) – Premier League, kick-off 3pm

May 20: Everton (H) – Premier League, kick-off 3pm

May 28: Arsenal (A) – Premier League, kick-off 4.30pm

Crystal Palace’s remaining fixtures

April 29: West Ham (H) – Premier League, kick-off 12.30pm

May 6: Tottenham (A) – Premier League, kick-off 3pm

May 13: Bournemouth (H) – Premier League, kick-off 3pm

May 20: Fulham (A) – Premier League, kick-off 3pm

May 28: Nottingham Forest (H) – Premier League, kick-off 4.30pm



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