Chelsea Silence Critics As Gusto Scores First Career Goal In 3-0 Win Over Wolves

Chelsea eased pressure on manager Enzo Maresca with a convincing 3-0 victory over Wolves at Stamford Bridge on Saturday, featuring the first professional goal of French defender Malo Gusto. Maresca’s team selection had come under fire after former Manchester United striker Wayne Rooney criticised his heavy rotation policy, suggesting senior players should “question” the manager’s decisions following a midweek 2-2 Champions League draw with Qarabag. Unfazed by the criticism, Maresca once again made sweeping changes—eight in total—for the Premier League clash, marking the sixth straight match in which he had altered seven or more players. This time, the move paid off handsomely. After a sluggish first half, Chelsea dominated the second period. Gusto broke the deadlock with his maiden career goal since joining from Lyon in 2023. Joao Pedro soon extended the lead, and Pedro Neto sealed the win to give the Blues their fourth victory in five league matches, lifting them into second place and within six points of leaders Arsenal. Although Manchester City’s clash with Liverpool on Sunday could push Chelsea back to third, the result offers Maresca a timely response to his critics heading into the international break. For Wolves, the defeat compounded a miserable run of form. Under interim coaches James Collins and Richard Walker, the bottom-placed side have now lost nine of their last 11 games and remain eight points adrift of safety. Meanwhile, Middlesbrough have reportedly granted manager Rob Edwards permission to speak with Wolves over the vacant managerial role after agreeing on a compensation package. Chelsea, who only returned from their midweek trip to Baku early Thursday morning, showed fatigue in the opening half but regained control after the break to secure a much-needed and morale-boosting win.

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Wolves Sack Vitor Pereira After Winless Run Leaves Club Bottom Of EPL

Wolverhampton Wanderers have sacked head coach Vitor Pereira after a woeful run of results left the club bottom of the Premier League table and without a single win this season. Pereira’s final game in charge was Saturday’s 3-0 defeat at Fulham — a performance he admitted was Wolves’ “worst” since his arrival. The loss extended their winless streak to 10 league matches, with only two points collected so far. The 57-year-old Portuguese coach signed a contract extension in September, keeping him at Molineux until 2028, but growing frustration among fans and a lack of progress made his position untenable. Wolves also suffered a 4-3 defeat to Chelsea in the Carabao Cup last week, crashing out at the round of 16. Pereira joined the club in December 2024 after the dismissal of Gary O’Neil, when Wolves sat 19th in the Premier League with just six points from their first 19 matches. He initially revived their fortunes, leading them to safety with a 16th-place finish thanks to ten wins in their final 22 games. That momentum soon faded. Following a six-game winning streak in April, Wolves have now gone 14 league matches without victory — losing 11 of those fixtures, including back-to-back defeats to Burnley and Fulham. Tensions between Pereira and the supporters boiled over last weekend when he appeared to argue with fans after the late loss to Burnley, amid chants of “you’re getting sacked in the morning.” The same chants echoed at Craven Cottage a week later. “Two months ago they sang my name because of what we did last season,” Pereira said after the Burnley match. “Now, without results, they sing my name maybe to sack me. But if I were a supporter, I would still feel proud of my team because they worked and showed mentality.” Wolves’ problems deepened over the summer when key players Rayan Aït-Nouri and Matheus Cunha departed for Manchester City and Manchester United respectively. Despite adding seven new signings, Pereira failed to steady the team’s decline, leading to his dismissal.

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