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Wolverhampton Wanderers 1 v 2 Ipswich Town
FA Premier League
Saturday, 14th December 2024 Kick-off 15:00
Wolverhampton Wanderers 1-2 Ipswich Town - Match Report
Saturday, 14th Dec 2024 17:13

Jack Taylor netted his first Premier League goal in the fourth minute of injury time to secure the Blues a 2-1 victory over fellow strugglers Wolves at Molineux which was as crucial as it was dramatic. Matt Doherty’s 15th-minute own goal gave Town a 1-0 half-time lead, before Matheus Cunha levelled on 72 for the home side, but Taylor claimed a famous win for the Blues with a far post header from a corner seconds before the whistle to grab three vital points.

Town, who went in to match having won only one of their last 17 at Wolves, made three changes from the team which lost 2-1 to AFC Bournemouth last Sunday with Jens Cajuste, Harry Clarke and Wes Burns coming into the team.

Clarke replaced Ben Johnson, who dropped to the bench, at right-back, while Cajuste took over from Jack Taylor in the centre of midfield, with the Irish international also among the subs.

Burns returned to the side for Sammie Szmodics, who was missing from the 20-man squad having been taken ill.

The Wales international’s inclusion saw Omari Hutchinson move to the left with Conor Chaplin the number 10.

Wolves made one change from the team which was defeated 2-1 at West Ham on Monday with Jean-Ricner Bellegarde coming in for the suspended Joao Gomes, while Mario Lemina was stripped of the captaincy earlier in the week and Nelson Semedo wore the armband.

Town, with Ed Sheeran alongside Blues chairman and CEO Mark Ashton and former Manchester United manager Ole Gunnar Solskjær also watching from the stands, started brightly, taking the game to the Old Gold with crosses from the left somehow just avoiding first Wes Burns, from Leif Davis, and then Conor Chaplin, from Liam Delap, at the back of the box either side of the 10-minute mark. Chaplin eventually was able to get in a shot but straight against a defender.

But on the quarter-hour, the Blues went in front. Delap muscled his way past Semedo on the right and into the area to the byline. The striker cut back to Hutchinson but it caught a defender on the way across, so the former Chelsea man was unable to take the chance, instead cutting inside, drawing keeper Sam Johnstone. His shot was blocked by Matt Doherty, but the ball deflected out to Chaplin, whose low effort hit Toti, then ricocheted back off Doherty and into the net.

Chaplin and his teammates celebrated in front of the Town fans, situated all along the lower tier of the far side, despite the forward denied what would have been his 100th goal for the club with it going down as a Doherty own goal.

Lemina blazed deep, deep, deep into the stand behind the goal on 19, then five minutes later, the home side should have levelled. After Dara O’Shea had given the ball away, Lemina found Bellegarde in space on the right of the area but the Frenchman also sent it well over, much to the frustration of the already tetchy home crowd.

After that spell, the Blues kept Wanderers pinned in their own half for a brief period, two Cajuste long throws causing problems but without leading to serious chances.

The home side quickly regained control, however, with their fans now getting behind them. On 33, Matheus Cunha got round the outside on the right before cutting the ball across the six-yard box but O’Shea was able to clear to Hutchinson on the edge of the area.

Within a minute, Rayan Ait-Nouri played in Jørgen Strand Larsen on the left of the box but the Norwegian’s effort was too close to Aro Muric, who saved.

The Blues continued to come under pressure and in the 37th minute Lemina struck a low shot from the edge of the area, which Muric saved down to his left.

Two minutes later, Town made a rare foray into the Wolves half, Cajuste teeing-up Hutchinson, whose 25-yard strike was too close to Johnstone, who saved comfortably to his right.

In the 41st minute, Santiago Bueno went to ground off the ball after a clash with Hutchinson, replays showing there had been nothing more of a shove away from the England U21 international. VAR evidently agreed and the Spaniard was able to continue.


Three minutes later, there was a more controversial incident when Ait-Nouri appeared to deliberately swing a hand into Burns’s face after the two had battled on the touchline. Referee Simon Hooper spoke to the Algerian but took no further action. VAR was similarly uninterested.

As the fourth official indicated three additional minutes, Ait-Nouri did get his name in the book for a foul on Burns.

That was the last action of the half with the home fans making their dissatisfaction very clear with loud boos following referee Hooper’s whistle.

Town had started brightly and on the front foot but with neither side having created a chance until the goal.

While the manner the ball crossed the line may have been fortuitous, Delap’s superb strength down the right to beat Semedo will not have gone unnoticed by his many suitors.

From there, Wolves had taken the game to Town with the Blues defending staunchly but with the home team having two opportunities they will feel they should have taken.

Ahead of the start of the second half, Wanderers made a change, Andre making way for Tommy Doyle in midfield.

Town began the period well and in the 48th minute forced a save. Morsy found Burns in space on the right of the box and the Welshman struck a powerful effort across Johnstone, which the keeper was able to palm away.

Wolves, however, began to see more of the ball with the Blues giving away possession too easily and too often in their own half.

On 53, Delap flicked a ball into Hutchinson’s path just inside the Wolves half with the former Chelsea man breaking between two defenders towards goal, but his touch wasn’t clean enough and a defender stabbed the ball back to Johnstone.

Six minutes later, the Blues went even closer. Chaplin swept a pass away to the right in behind Ait-Nouri for Burns. The winger crossed for Delap, who threw a knee towards it but could only divert it across the face and well wide. In Delap’s defence, the ball came at him at an awkward height.

On 62 Clarke was booked for a foul on Ait-Nouri, then two minutes later, Goncalo Guedes replaced Doherty for the home side.

Wolves, whose fans were swinging from boos for their players being offside or misplacing passes to loudly backing their team when attacking with greater conviction, threatened on 68, Ait-Nouri seeing a shot deflect wide after Bellegarde had ridden challenges to get to the edge of the area.

The home crowd were becoming ever more fractious towards their team but in the 72nd minute they equalised.

Sub Guedes played in Cunha on the left of the area and the Brazilian international shot between Muric and his post to claim his eighth goal of the season.

Having been pegged back, Town made a double change in the 75th minute, Taylor and Jack Clarke replacing Cajuste and Chaplin, Hutchinson moving into the centre, Hwang Hee-Chan having taken over from Bellegarde for the home side.

Wolves, with their fans now well behind them, went looking for a second goal, Burgess making a superb saving challenge on Strand Larsen as the forward was about to shoot from a very promising position. On 78, the Norwegian international struck another effort from the edge of the box, which Muric bundled behind.

As the game moved into its final eight minutes, Cunha hit a fizzing low shot from distance which Muric initially failed to hold onto but claimed at the second attempt.

A minute later, the home support thought Strand Larsen had won it, but the on-loan Celta Vigo man somehow sent Guedes’s cross from the right wide. Ahead of the goal-kick, Town swapped Delap and Burns for Ali Al-Hamadi and Johnson.

Wolves had another great opportunity to claim the three points on 85 when Harry Clarke was unable to get his head on a cross-field ball for Cunha, who brought it in on goal before hitting a shot which Muric blocked but was unable to hold. The ball ran back to the Brazilian but he sent his effort well into the stand.

Town were hanging on with the game now almost exclusively played in the Town half, although as three additional minutes were indicated strong runs from Hutchinson and Al-Hamadi saw the Blues threaten, the Iraqi international scuffing wide from a good position on the right of the area having done well to get there.

And with around two seconds left the Blues won it. Jack Clarke sent over a deep corner from the left and sub Taylor rose unmarked at the back post to nod home his first Premier League goal.

The Ireland international whipped his shirt off as he ran over to the Town fans, leaping a fence as he did so, to celebrate a vital winning goal with the delighted Blues support, picking up a booking he will care little about as a result.

There was just time for a restart before referee Hooper blew his whistle. prompting angry boos from the home fans and dust-ups between Cunha and a member of the the Town security staff first and then Al-Nouri with Burns and then stewards, with Blues coaches including Sone Aluko and Rene Gilmartin helping to hold back the fighting factions.

Al-Nouri it later emerged was shown a second yellow card and then a red in the tunnel, while Delap was handed a fifth booking of the season which will see him miss next weekend’s game against Newcastle.

Manager Gary O’Neil, whose position looks even more precarious after a fourth successive defeat, approached referee Hooper for a lengthy discussion, with the officials still on the pitch long after the end with Aluko seemingly acting as impromptu security with the melee around the tunnel continuing.

A vital, vital victory for the Blues, ending a run of three defeats in a row - McKenna has never lost four in a row in the league ahead of his third anniversary on Monday - and with a gap to safety having grown to four points and a very tough run over Christmas.

The Blues were worth their lead in the first half and had opportunities to increase advantage in the second before Wolves had a strong spell in which they scored and had further opportunities to win it.

But Town somehow found a new burst of energy in injury time and had had a couple of chances before Taylor joined Morsy and Chaplin in scoring in the top four divisions, and Szmodics in netting in the top five, to claim a first win at Molineux since a 2-0 December 2012 victory under a delighted Mick McCarthy, who had been sacked by the Old Gold earlier that year.

Wolves showing their frailty at set pieces once again, seven goals of eight in their last three games having come via that route.

A second away win of the season for the Blues, who are now only one point behind Crystal Palace, who are at Brighton tomorrow for a derby.

Town: Muric, H Clarke, O'Shea, Burgess, Davis, Morsy (c), Cajuste (Taylor 75), Burns, Chaplin (J Clarke 75), Hutchinson, Delap. Unused: Walton, Johnson, Woolfenden, Townsend, Phillips, Broadhead, Al-Hamadi.

Wolves: Johnstone, Doherty (Guedes 64), Semedo (c), Bueno, Toti, Ait-Nouri, Andre (Doyle 46), Lemina, Bellegarde (Hwang 73), Cunha, Strand Larsen. Unused: Bentley, Dawson, R Gomes, Forbs, Meupiyou, Lima. Referee: Simon Hooper (Wiltshire). VAR official: Darren England. Att: 30,866.


Photo: Action Images/Reuters



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Dissboyitfc added 00:20 - Dec 15
My take on the Muric debate, had he saved that,had he kept that out no one would say what an amazing save, he should have and he will know he should have done better with it, whilst it wasnt an abslolute howler, Any keeper worth his salt should be keeping that out! He is now under scrutiny more than ever and any mistakes he makes he is going to get stick!

Also it shouldnt be over looked that it appeared to take a slight deflection off the toe of harry Clarkes right foot and that will have altered the flight of the ball, so maybe cut him a little slack but its because of his previous mistakes he will rightly or wrongly get over criticised

Cant seem to find out anywhere that Delap was booked?
3

KiwiTractor added 00:33 - Dec 15
Firstly, really happy to get a win today - awesome that the players kept fighting right to the end.

Wolves are a pretty poor side, but I think they were unlucky not to take something from the match today, HOWEVER it didn't need to be that way - I'm still struggling to understand why we nearly always slow up play when we attack the opposition box, it just gives the defence a chance to get organised.... I'm assuming it's the managers instructions, otherwise the coaches should be rectifying the situation. Twice we attacked the box with pace, first time Delap and we end up scoring, the second time was when Burns got into space and crossed - if only he had played the simple ball on the ground then Delap probably would have scored.

Playing out from the back is excruciating to watch, and simply put not working like it did in the lower divisions. So frustrating watching us pass back to Muric from the edge of the opposition penalty area.

As other have said, Burgess outstanding today. Thought Cajuste was good too. Jack Clarke showed a couple of glimpses of what he can do (great corner), hopefully he gets some confidence from that.

Harry Clarke very poor, not helped by Burns playing in front of him - equally out of his depth (although with a couple of better touches today). We really struggle down that side without Axel.

Muric was good on crosses today, but fumbled a few shots and as well documented, beaten at the near post (with no deflection) - that said, he's not the only EPL keeper beaten at the near post this season.

2

VanDusen added 00:47 - Dec 15
Such an intense match. Far less singing than normal shows how absorbing it was, if an absolute shocker of a game for the neutral until the last ten mins or so.

Anyway - my problem with Muric is my heart is in my mouth every time he has the ball and it outweighs the good things when he does them (and he does do them I know). It's partly cos he doesn't look as comfortable on the ball as Hladky did by this time last season. He's also prone to a spill more than average which doesn't help. Fundamentally though it's his playing practically on the halfway line and having witnessed THAT ten minutes at City. I can see what McKenna is hoping for as he clearly has a distinctive game to him - but can we afford his learning curve this season? If he is as young as he says then there's plenty of time for him to come through in a consolidation season rather than a life and death struggle without an established 10 in front of him relieving the pressure (Clarke was equally at fault for the goal and a number of other dangerous testing chances were a result of us playing him into trouble).

As a final mitigation I'd love to see an age split on Muric lovers and haters. I wonder if those of us who remember a goalkeeper problem being a contributing factor to our last Premier League relegation are less prone to feel we can afford Muric if he's not the full deal yet...

Anyway - the key thing about today is it's the first time the team spirit of the last two seasons really felt on display for the Premier League, if not the swagger. I'm under no illusions that all of those players look like they are going to quite make it as Premier League calibre, but they do bring out a tenacity that we're gonna need if we're to make that jump to safety...
5

Dissboyitfc added 07:04 - Dec 15
Kiwi i froze the frame and it very much appeared to take a deflection!
3

joyousblue added 07:44 - Dec 15
Gkroon89 , why dont you and the others even in a win , you moan , if mckenna thinks muric is number 1 , he is number 1 , whatever job you have , im sure you do it well , mckenna knows whats he is doing far greater than you , why dont we remember the great saves he has made to , jackson last year muric this year , im all for opinions but its all they are , the man who knows better is mckenna , the players read the crititism , why dont you highlite the good not the bad
6

oldelsworthyfan added 08:14 - Dec 15
Time to give our Manager 100% support by getting off Muric's back.
10

Linkboy13 added 09:16 - Dec 15
Who the hell are fotmob just someone else's opinion dosent make it right. Just luv winding blues 1 up.
0

dirtydingusmagee added 12:17 - Dec 15
Careful Robsonwark your stupid remarks re Muric match fixing could find you need a lawyer.
6

Broadbent23 added 12:43 - Dec 15
That was an early Xmas present. We keep on fighting the cause of survival. KMc needs a master plan for Newcastle without LD and hopefully with a fit Smoddy.
2

Theipswich added 13:04 - Dec 15
I am not Muric's best fan and would prefer Walton in goal any day but feel he wasn't at fault for Wolves's goal ...let's give the guy some slack FGS. In the end we are better when club and supporters are united and criticism is not personal and vile. Great result yesterday and now onto 3 points against Newcastle, who are beatable...
4

Leejames99 added 14:59 - Dec 15
Just thought maybe this would educate the haters with blinkers and blame on our goalkeeper Muric.
All Premier League keepers make mistakes at various points in season including the world number one so can we please give our goalkeeper a break and support him, as you know we have teams with top top strikers coming up like we do every week and week and any points we get especially at home will be a bonus so no negativity anymore please. Walton did great in league 1 and maybe he will get a chance but until then Muric is our number one. Its crazy the the old guard players never get blame, it was Burns lost ball and Clarke swept aside before the shot even taken yesterday.
Enjoy!
PS @linkboy yes I do watch every game!
1

Leejames99 added 15:06 - Dec 15
Oh look....In goal for Man City!
0

NthStander added 15:54 - Dec 15
Delap booked as well in the melee at game end and now suspended for Newcastle ???
0

blueboy1981 added 18:27 - Dec 15
Nothing other than near Post cover was required by Muric to prevent that Wolves goal, and he let it in !!
Muric has some elementary Goalkeeping faults, and we suffer from them.
Who is Working on him /them ? - such is MUCH needed to complement the potential he definitely has, but Prem’ standard ? - no way currently !
1

Leejames99 added 20:44 - Dec 15
So Muric at Man City would of been coached by Richard Wright and he played and trained with elite players daily. He was in Prem with Burnley last year and was Championship keeper of the year before, he can't be that bad if Pep picked him as did Kompany.
All keepers make mistakes as do the players in front of him.
Southampton and Wolves have conceded way more.
Anyway see what the moaners moan about next week.
Have good week everyone.
In Mckenna we trust COYB
1

RobsonWark added 22:23 - Dec 15
Thank you LeeJames you've just confirmed what we true fans can see about Muric. How useless he is with thst soft, slow back pass he let in for Burnley on your first video at about 2 minutes 10 seconds through. LOL.

BRING BACK WALTON!
-1

Leejames99 added 23:24 - Dec 15
@RobsonWark
Did you miss every other top keeper, Martinez, Allison etc making gaffes.
As a true fan I support whoever is on the pitch that's why it's called a "Supporter" we support anyone who pulls on an ITFC shirt, not berate them on here like a pundit!
Out of interest you would rather have a league 1 keeper/championship keeper than an premiershipexperienced international goalkeeper who has played for the champions and was coached by one of our own in Richard Wright, who made some howlers himself but made the grade to become Arsenal number one and England International.

For clarity you keep saying 'bring back Walton', so you know we still have Walton, he sits on bench every week to be called upon if our number 1 gets injured, and he can't get in the team because our manager makes the selection nobody else!

I hope that gives you some 'true fans' some closure on the goalkeeper situation at Ipswich Town currently. PS we also have a very exciting former Man City Academy keeper called Ceiron Slicker and a former Man U keeper coaching them so all in all if Pep, Mourinho, Sir Alex and our very own KMcK rate Muric in goal then that's good enough for me and us actual supporters will cheer him on through good and bad!

Your welcome!
COYB
3

alfromcol added 23:49 - Dec 15
I'm not sure Delaps yellow card counts towards the 5 as it was after the game had ended. Hopefully I am correct. COYBs
0

Alphawhiskey added 08:53 - Dec 16
Great win for us.
A kind of lucky win, but a win is a win and its about time we had some luck.

Please get behind Muric, he isn't that bad.
The trouble is when keepers make mistakes, it usually ends up in the net.
Outfield players makes many many mistakes too.
Every single goal scored in football is usually the result of a mistake made by the opposition leading up to it. The keeper is the last man so always gets the blame.

Muric has also pulled off so many world class saves, people seem to forget that.
He, like many other players we have is work in progress.
We go again. COYB
0


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