Wolves ease past Leicester as new manager bounce comes in clutch for Pereira


Vitor Pereira made the dream start to life as Wolves head coach as his new side ended a run of four straight defeats with a 3-0 win against Leicester on Sunday.

Goals from Goncalo Guedes, Rodrigo Gomes and Matheus Cunha across a 25-minute spell in the first half sealed an impressive win for Pereira, who replaced Gary O’Neil on Thursday.

Victory leaves them 18th, two points from safety. Incidentally, it is the Foxes – who have now conceded seven goals in two games – who occupy the spot just above them.

Pereira’s Premier League bow almost started in nightmare fashion. Leicester went direct to Jamie Vardy, whose poke towards onrushing Jose Sa was blocked outside of the box. VAR took a look but the goalkeeper’s hands were not involved.

Vitor Pereira replaced Gary O'Neil at Molineux on Thursday
Image:
Vitor Pereira replaced Gary O’Neil at Molineux on Thursday

Then the dream start got going. Guedes shielded a bouncing ball from Jannik Vestergaard and tucked home from a tight angle, before James Justin inexplicably backed away and left a long ball, allowing Rodrigo Gomes to nip in and roll past the stricken Danny Ward.

Player ratings:

Leicester: Ward (4), Justin (5), Coady (6), Vestergaard (5), Kristiansen (6), Soumare (6), Skipp (5), El Khannouss (5), Mavididi (6), Ayew (5), Vardy (6).

Subs: Faes (6), Winks (6), Choudhury (6), Decordova-Reid (5), Buonanotte (n/a).

Wolves: Sa (6), Semedo (7), Bueno (7), Toti (7), Doherty (7), Andre (7), J Gomes (7), R Gomes (7), Guedes (8), Cunha (8), Strand Larsen (6).

Subs: Subs: Hwang (5), Dawson (n/a), Doyle (n/a), Forbs (n/a), Bellegarde (n/a).

Player of the Match: Matheus Cunha.

The second was greeted by boos from the Leicester fans – who had seen their side thumped 4-0 by Newcastle last time out – and those boos grew more intense when Cunha – charged with misconduct by the FA this week following an incident after the full-time whistle against Ipswich – hit a shot that Ward got fingertips to but could not prevent from hitting the net.

Wolves' Rodrigo Gomes scores their side's second goal of the game
Image:
Wolves’ Rodrigo Gomes scores their side’s second goal of the game

Even more impressive was how clinical the visitors were given they ended the first half with an expected goals (xG) figure of just 0.4.

Leicester had plenty of the ball in the second half and time after time sent long balls forward for Jamie Vardy, with little success. Otherwise, Ruud van Nistelrooy’s side lacked drive and quality in the final third.

Matheus Cunha celebrates scoring Wolves' third goal
Image:
Matheus Cunha celebrates scoring Wolves’ third goal

Wolves were comfortable as a resul, but did have chances to extend their lead, most notably when Joao Gomes met Cunha’s wicked cross inside the final 10 minutes, stooping but sending his header wide. By that point, though, the win was wrapped up.

Analysis: Guedes can be key as Wolves bid to climb away from trouble

Sky Sports’ Dan Long:

Goncalo Guedes has had wait for his chance at Wolves.

He was shipped out on loan to boyhood club Benfica at the start of 2023 – halfway through the first season after his £27.5m move from Valencia – then to Villarreal a year later, and when he was finally integrated into the squad this season, he had to make do with late cameos.

However, over the last two months, he has started to show why Wolves paid the money they did for him.

Image:
Goncalo Guedes has had to bide his time at Wolves

He scored once and provided three assists in Gary O’Neil’s final seven Premier League games – but looked invigorated when new Wolves head coach Vitor Pereira put him in from the start against Leicester. He no doubt has a point to prove and a clean slate to work with.

The 28-year-old showed guile to fire in the opener from the tightest of angles after Jannik Vestergaard allowed a ball to bounce in the box, then did so well to twist and turn away from trouble to set up Matheus Cunha for the third.

His goal had an xG value of 0.05, with the assist value just 0.01 xA.

That means he has been directly involved in six goals across his last eight Premier League games after managing just two goal involvements in his first 19 English top-flight appearances.

As Wolves begin a new era, this could be Guedes’ time to shine.

Story of the match in stats…

What’s coming up in the Premier League?



Source link

About The Author

Scroll to Top