West Brom came from behind to claim victory in the Black Country derby as two penalties from Matheus Pereira helped them beat Wolves at Molineux.
It was only the Baggies’ second win of the season – and their first under new boss Sam Allardyce – and the first time they had scored three times away from home in the Premier League in almost seven years.
While they remain in the relegation zone, it will provide fresh optimism about avoiding the drop.
Both spot-kicks came from clumsy tackles from behind on Callum Robinson, by Willy Boly and Conor Coady.
The penalties were similar too as Pereira sent Rui Patricio the wrong way. The first broke the deadlock after eight minutes, the second won the game 11 minutes into the second half.
In between, Fabio Silva and Boly turned the game on its head in the space of five minutes at the end of the first half, only for Semi Ajayi to level with a header straight after the restart.
The result extended a miserable run for Wolves, who since striker Raul Jimenez fractured his skull at Arsenal on 29 November have taken five points from nine games and slid down the table into 14th spot, with all the clubs below them having games in hand.
Battling Baggies extend derby record
After a nine-year break since the last one, this result extended an excellent West Brom record in derbies, which now contains just three defeats in 22 games.
They achieved victory without goalkeeper Sam Johnstone, who was absent following a positive coronavirus test, and with a vocal intervention from Allardyce.
Having spent most of the game in his dug-out, legs stretched out and arms folded, the former England boss finally came out to voice an opinion as his side, trailing and looking edgy, failed to execute what their manager felt was a routine clearance.
Alllardyce’s bellowing could be heard from the media seats. The instruction was clear – get the ball away from our goal quickly.
The advice was heeded and while he might not like the description, within minutes, his side had scored what might be regarded as a typical Allardyce goal as Kyle Bartley flicked on a long throw to the near post and Ajayi nodded it over Patricio.
Pereira was nerveless with his penalties and while West Brom can hardly be relied on to either score regularly or keep clean sheets at present, Allardyce has apparently instilled some drive into his players.
With significant additions before the transfer window closes on 1 February, it cannot be discounted that Allardyce will maintain his proud record of never getting relegated.
Wolves struggling without Jimenez
If there was one moment that underlined Nuno Espirito Santo’s increasingly desperate search for an answer to his side’s problems, it came 19 minutes into the second half.
Skipper Coady had never been substituted before under the Portuguese.
But after the England man conceded his side’s second penalty for another clumsy challenge on Robinson, Nuno evidently decided he was expendable as he switched his team around to accommodate the introduction of Rayan Ait-Nouri at full-back.
In a season where Nuno was committed to change anyway, the loss of Jimenez is threatening to undermine confidence in all the good work Wolves have done in progressing from a mid-table Championship outfit into a side capable of securing successive seventh-place finishes in the Premier League.
If, for instance, Wolves finished 15th this season, it would be an outcome they have only bettered three times since they were relegated in 1976. Evidently though, spending and improvement under Nuno has raised expectations.
They certainly made enough chances to beat West Brom – and had a staggering 23 shots – but without Jimenez, there was no consistent threat.
Fabio Silva took his goal well, opening his body up and sending a precise finish into the far corner from Boly’s back-heeled pass. But when crosses come into the box, he does not routinely attack them as Jimenez would.
When Boly put Wolves ahead with an instinctive effort just before the break, it did appear the hosts would claim victory.
Instead, West Brom rallied and though the hosts had responded once to falling behind for the ninth successive league game, a second comeback proved beyond them.
Covid protocols breached
After all the talk about new Premier League protocols, Wolves celebrated both their goals normally and had pre-match huddles in the dressing room and on the pitch.
And after the final whistle, West Brom’s players celebrated in the usual fashion, underlining the difficulty in getting players to follow the demands of those trying to reinforce regulations.
‘We must rectify it and do better’ – reaction
Wolves boss Nuno Espirito Santo to BBC Sport: “Disappointing, frustrated with the way we played and the result.
“The beginning of the second half, we started very poorly.
“Two penalties and a throw-in [were West Brom’s goals]. We knew we required better defending. We must rectify it and do better.”
West Brom manager Sam Allardyce to BBC Sport: “The only two disappointing moments for me were the two quick goals we conceded when we didn’t look like we were going to concede.
“Defending set-plays has been one of our few strengths this season and we conceded two today.
“Overall it was a fantastic victory. It was the amount of chances we created which pleased me most. I haven’t seen us create that many chances.
“A win was very important at this moment in time. The attitude, work-rate and determination of the players, that’s brought us a big, big victory.”
Wolves concede first again – the stats
- West Brom manager Sam Allardyce has faced Wolves more often without losing than any other side in the Premier League (P6 W4 D2), winning his past two meetings.
- West Brom have won consecutive away league matches against Wolves for the first time since a run of three between 1929 and 1931.
- Wolves are without a clean sheet in 12 Premier League games, the longest ongoing run among sides currently in the division.
- Wolves have conceded the first goal in each of their past nine Premier League games – their longest ever run of conceding the opening goal in games in the competition.
- Willy Boly became the first Wolves player to concede a penalty, assist a goal and score a goal in the same Premier League game since Adlene Guedioura in May 2011 – which was also against West Brom at Molineux.
- Matheus Pereira became the first player to score two penalties in a Premier League match for a newly promoted club since Chris Brunt also did so for West Brom against Liverpool in April 2011.
- Semi Ajayi’s goal for West Brom was their first via a throw-in in the Premier League since Graham Dorrans vs QPR in April 2012. Indeed, since the start of 2018-19, no defender has scored more headed league goals in England’s top four tiers than Ajayi (nine – level with Virgil van Dijk and Aaron Pierre).
- Wolves have lost both of their Premier League games in which Fabio Silva has scored (also 1-2 v Burnley in December), making him the youngest player ever to lose both of the first two Premier League games in which he scored (18 years 181 days).
What’s next?
Wolves travel to non-league Chorley in the FA Cup fourth round on Friday (19:45 GMT), before returning to Premier League action against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge on Wednesday, 27 January (18:00 GMT).
Next up for West Brom is a Premier League match against West Ham at London Stadium on Tuesday (18:00 GMT).
Player of the match
Matheus PereiraMatheus Pereira
Wolverhampton Wanderers
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Squad number8Player nameRúben Neves
Average rating7.26
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Squad number7Player namePedro Neto
Average rating4.94
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Squad number37Player nameTraoré
Average rating4.92
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Squad number15Player nameBoly
Average rating4.85
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Squad number17Player nameFábio Silva
Average rating4.72
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Squad number11Player nameRui Patrício
Average rating4.44
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Squad number3Player nameAït-Nouri
Average rating4.32
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Squad number22Player nameNélson Semedo
Average rating4.30
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Squad number27Player nameSaïss
Average rating4.28
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Squad number28Player nameJoão Moutinho
Average rating4.26
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Squad number32Player nameDendoncker
Average rating4.23
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Squad number16Player nameCoady
Average rating3.93
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Squad number23Player nameCutrone
Average rating3.78
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Squad number18Player nameGibbs-White
Average rating3.75
West Bromwich Albion
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Squad number12Player nameMatheus Pereira
Average rating7.46
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Squad number6Player nameAjayi
Average rating7.34
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Squad number23Player nameSnodgrass
Average rating7.32
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Squad number5Player nameBartley
Average rating7.27
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Squad number7Player nameRobinson
Average rating7.05
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Squad number13Player nameGrosicki
Average rating6.73
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Squad number27Player nameO’Shea
Average rating6.72
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Squad number3Player nameGibbs
Average rating6.61
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Squad number25Player nameButton
Average rating6.58
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Squad number4Player nameRobson-Kanu
Average rating6.50
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Squad number8Player nameLivermore
Average rating6.50
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Squad number2Player nameFurlong
Average rating6.36
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Squad number19Player nameSawyers
Average rating6.31
Line-ups
Wolves
Formation 4-3-3
- 11Rui Patrício
- 22Nélson Semedo
- 15Boly
- 16CoadySubstituted forAït-Nouriat 64′minutes
- 27Saïss
- 32DendonckerBooked at 73mins
- 8NevesSubstituted forGibbs-Whiteat 60′minutes
- 28João MoutinhoSubstituted forCutroneat 79′minutes
- 37Traoré
- 17Fábio SilvaBooked at 90mins
- 7Neto
Substitutes
- 2Hoever
- 3Aït-Nouri
- 18Gibbs-White
- 20Vitinha
- 21Ruddy
- 23Cutrone
- 38Shabani
- 49Kilman
- 60Corbeanu
West Brom
Formation 4-2-3-1
- 25Button
- 27O’Shea
- 6AjayiBooked at 36mins
- 5Bartley
- 3Gibbs
- 8Livermore
- 19Sawyers
- 23Snodgrass
- 12Costa PereiraSubstituted forFurlongat 83′minutes
- 13GrosickiSubstituted forRobson-Kanuat 69′minutes
- 7Robinson
Substitutes
- 2Furlong
- 4Robson-Kanu
- 17Krovinovic
- 20Ivanovic
- 21Edwards
- 22Peltier
- 24Kipré
- 28Field
- 31Lonergan
- Referee:
- Michael Oliver
Match Stats
Live Text
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Match ends, Wolverhampton Wanderers 2, West Bromwich Albion 3.
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Second Half ends, Wolverhampton Wanderers 2, West Bromwich Albion 3.
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Corner, Wolverhampton Wanderers. Conceded by Jake Livermore.
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Fábio Silva (Wolverhampton Wanderers) is shown the yellow card.
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Fábio Silva (Wolverhampton Wanderers) has gone down, but the referee deems it simulation.
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Attempt missed. Rayan Aït-Nouri (Wolverhampton Wanderers) right footed shot from outside the box is too high. Assisted by Leander Dendoncker.
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Attempt blocked. Nélson Semedo (Wolverhampton Wanderers) left footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked.
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Patrick Cutrone (Wolverhampton Wanderers) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
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Foul by Dara O’Shea (West Bromwich Albion).
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Attempt blocked. Pedro Neto (Wolverhampton Wanderers) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Morgan Gibbs-White.
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Attempt saved. Willy Boly (Wolverhampton Wanderers) header from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Morgan Gibbs-White with a cross.
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Adama Traoré (Wolverhampton Wanderers) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
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Foul by Kieran Gibbs (West Bromwich Albion).
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Substitution, West Bromwich Albion. Darnell Furlong replaces Matheus Pereira.
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Attempt missed. Patrick Cutrone (Wolverhampton Wanderers) right footed shot from the centre of the box is too high.
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Corner, Wolverhampton Wanderers. Conceded by Kieran Gibbs.
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Rayan Aït-Nouri (Wolverhampton Wanderers) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
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Foul by Hal Robson-Kanu (West Bromwich Albion).
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Leander Dendoncker (Wolverhampton Wanderers) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
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Foul by Matheus Pereira (West Bromwich Albion).