Wolves v Nottingham Forest: Premier League – live | Football


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Former Wolves manager Julen Lopetegui looks like he’s in trouble at West Ham.

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Wolves’ ‘defence’ tonight is certainly … different. There are no natural centre backs at all. Doherty, Bueno, Ait Nouri, and Pedro Lima are all full backs or wing backs.

Wolves manager Vitor Pereira has been talking about their shape to the cameras tonight:

Sometimes it is a hybrid system. Sometimes we play a back four, and sometimes with three defenders. I don’t want to play with three centre-backs. I want to play with three defenders. It’s different. Sometimes we press higher with our wingers.

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Let’s unpack those teams a bit.

Wolves are much changed! Pedro Lima gets his Premier League debut (he has played twice in the League Cup this season) while Rodrigo Gomes, Jorgen Strand Larsen, Goncalo Guedes and Tommy Doyle all come back into the XI. Matheus Cunha is a big miss, he’s suspended. It’s not immediately clear who is captain, and Wolves have not announced that on their social media channels either.

Murillo and Callum Hudson-Odoi return for the visitors, having missed the win at Everton through injury. A big plus for Nuno.

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Team news!

Wolves: José Sa, Doherty, Bueno, Ait Nouri, Pedro Lima, Doyle, Joao Gomes, Rodrigo Gomes, Goncalo Guedes, Hwang, Larsen.
Subs: Johnstone, Lemina, Sarabia, Forbs, Bellegarde, Meupiyou, Cundle, Pond, Okoduwa.

Nottingham Forest: Sels, Aina, Milenkovic, Murillo, Williams, Dominguez, Anderson, Elanga, Gibbs-White, Hudson-Odoi, Wood.
Subs: Carlos Miguel, Morato, Awoniyi, Ward-Prowse, Alex, Jota Silva, Yates, Sosa, Boly.

Referee: Peter Bankes

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Preamble

It may not be a surprise to learn that there are more Portuguese managers (four) in the Premier League than English ones (three). Two of them – Vítor Pereira and Nuno Espírito Santo – meet today, with the latter returning to the club and the city he called home between 2017-2021.

Wolves under Nuno were brilliant: promoted from the Championship in his first season, he then secured back-to-back seventh-placed finishes in his first two seasons in the top flight before a mid-table campaign rounded off his time in the Midlands. Nuno bought well, largely compatriots including Diogo Jota, Rúben Neves, João Moutinho, Rui Patrício, as well as Raúl Jiménez (albeit from Portuguese giants Benfica), Adama Traoré (from Middlesbrough) and Max Kilman (from non-league Maidenhead United). With that squad, plus academy graduate Morgan Gibbs-White, it is easy to see why Wolves qualified for the Europa League.

Nuno and his Portuguese entourage created an identity and a legacy that survives today in the Wolves squad. The number of Portuguese speakers in the first-team squad is now in double figures (including four Brazilians), while the new-ish manager, Pereira, and six Portuguese staff members adding to the tally. Wolverhampton has changed, too, with Portuguese restaurants and cafes springing up all over the city (although I’m sad to report that the coffee shop, Aromas de Portugal, that featured heavily in our 2018 interview with Jota and Neves is now closed).

Anyway, welcome home Nuno, sort of. It remains to be seen what kind of reception the top-four chasing manager gets at relegation-threatened Molineux but this should be a lively and (very Portuguese) one.

Kick-off: 8pm GMT.

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