Wolves launch commemorative 2026-27 home kit published at 11:25 BST 5 June
11:25 BST 5 June
Image source, Wolves
Wolves have revealed their official 2026-27 home kit as part of their landmark 150th anniversary celebrations.
The kit will feature the Wolverhampton city coat of arms, in place of their usual badge, for the first time in more than 30 years.
Produced in partnership with official kit manufacturer SUDU, the anniversary shirt is said to honour the deep connection between Wolves, the city of Wolverhampton and the supporters who have defined the club across a century and a half.
The kit's creation came after a consultation with fans, who voted on the particular shade of gold the shirt should be.
Almost 10,000 supporters took part over a 13-day period, with 47 per cent of the vote going for the '90s shade of gold.
Wolves club historian Peter Crump said: "This shade of gold holds a very special place in the heart of this club. It was the colour Wolves wore during some of our greatest years and one that so many supporters instantly associate with Wolves."
With all 48 World Cup squads now confirmed, we look at how they shape up and compare with each other leading into the tournament.
Which clubs have the most players?
Looking just at the 20 clubs that made up the 2025-26 Premier League, only this season's top three have more players at the World Cup than Conference League winners Crystal Palace (12).
Including players out on loan over the season, Sunderland remarkably have as many representatives on the global stage as Chelsea and Liverpool (11), showing just how globe-trotting their recruitment was following promotion last summer.
The majority of Brentford, Everton and Leeds' squads can put their feet up and recharge their batteries for next season, with those clubs sending just four players each.
Replace Edwards with Frank - Fan views on who should stay and go at Wolvespublished at 18:02 BST 29 May
18:02 BST 29 May
Image source, Getty Images
We asked for your views on which players Wolves need to keep if they are to ensure their return to the second tier is a brief one and who they should cash in on.
Here are some of your comments:
Duncan: The irony is that the players we should look to keep are the ones that will the hardest to keep hold of. Many of the squad are mentally and physically drained from multiple relegation battles and would thrive from a fresh start but struggle in the fierce Championship. Santiago Bueno, Ladislav Krejci, David Moller Wolfe, Rodrigo Gomes, Andre, Mateus Mane and Adam Armstrong should be built around. I'd love to see Sasa Kalajdzic finally get a shot following injuries and loans.
Dan: We have to keep Mane, no matter what offers come in, and build the team around him. I'd also prioritise Jose Sa staying, he is a fantastic keeper and a leader. Get rid of the other keepers and anyone who thinks they are too good for the Championship.
Dave: Mane is the key to keep (and Andre after his new contract). Wouldn't shed a tear for anyone else leaving - assume we came back up, they've already proven they're not good enough for the Premier League.
Ben: Naturally, the list of players we'd want to keep is a lot shorter. Keeping Andre is a welcome surprise. Hugo and Santiago Bueno would be a cut above in the Championship, as would Yerson Mosquera and Krejci. Jean-Ricner Bellegarde, Rodrigo Gomes, Tommy Doyle and Armstrong could also be useful. The rest can go!
Rob: Disastrous couple of years - should have put foundations in like Brighton, Brentford and Bournemouth - it is amateur hour. Keep only a select few - Andre, Krejci, Rodrigo Gomes, Mane and both the Buenos!
Mick: Firstly I'd get rid of the manager Rob Edwards and get Thomas Frank. I'd keep Andre, Bellegarde, Mane, the two Buenos and Rodrigo Gomes. Sell the rest.
Jack: Hugo Bueno. Great ability and one of the few to come out of this season with some credit. He deserves to play higher, so I am doubtful we will keep him.
Chris: I think we should keep: Matheus Cunha, Rayan Ait-Nouri, Ruben Neves, Nelson Semedo, Pedro Neto, Raul Jimenez and many others. Oh no. They've already left. That must be why we're going down. Doh!
Wolves quickfire end of season reviewpublished at 12:48 BST 29 May
12:48 BST 29 May
Image source, Getty Images
The most significant moment of the season - good or bad - was...
Last summer's transfer window, which saw Matheus Cunha and Rayan Ait-Nouri sold, with Nelson Semedo also leaving on a free. None were replaced, with Tolu Arokodare, David Moller Wolfe, Fer Lopez, Jackson Tchatchoua and Jhon Arias failing to make an impact. Then-boss Vitor Pereira was so frustrated with the business, he regretted staying beyond the start of the season. It set up the club to fail.
The season has been a success or failure because..
More than a failure, a disaster, but one which has been coming after selling the best players for a number of years and failing to replace them. There was a misguided belief in the players brought in and, with the squad significantly weakened, there was only one way for the season to go.
The unsung hero of the season is....
Quite a difficult question, looking for heroes in a season of failure, but Wolves assistant Harry Watling does not get the credit he deserves.
If there's a player or staff member with more to do in future it is.... because...
Take your pick. Several of last summer's transfer flops are likely to be moved on. Tchatchoua has come in for particular criticism but every single player who remains from the current group must do more after the worst season in Wolves' history.
The major club issue or talking point lurking is...
Can Rob Edwards revive and revitalise the squad quickly enough over the summer to start quickly and erase the growing doubts of the fans? He has the backing of executive chairman Nathan Shi and technical director Matt Jackson but needs to produce fast results to keep the fans from revolting.
The reason for hope going forward is...
There is a real desire for change and a determination to listen and learn. Shi, Jackson and Edwards were grilled in front of 250 fans at Molineux in a forum hosted by BBC WM this month. Many clubs have, and do, pull the shutters down at times like this but the noises from the club are positive. They just need results to back it up.
Who do Wolves need to keep after relegation?published at 15:30 BST 28 May
15:30 BST 28 May
Image source, Getty Images
A disappointing 2025-26 Premier League season has come to an end for Wolves.
The next campaign will begin in the Championship with top-flight clubs keen to secure cut-price deals for relegated players.
Which players do you think Wolves need to keep if they are to ensure their return to the second tier is a brief one? And who would be the ones to cash in on?
'Failure on this scale now creates the opportunity for a full reset'published at 16:12 BST 27 May
16:12 BST 27 May
Mike Taylor BBC Radio WM reporter
Image source, Getty Images
"It feels like they have been adding games on at the end," said Greg, an exasperated supporter calling the Radio WM Phone-In last week.
There was no arguing with that.
Since the elongated spring international break dissipated the momentum Wolves had briefly built, the season had become a joyless yomp to the end, a time-filler until the really serious business can begin.
It does still feel inappropriate and even insulting to their dogged supporters to refer to games that they continued to attend in good faith in this way. But the final peculiarity in a strange, dark season is that the last match signals not a pause, but the moment when rebuilding must start at pace.
At the recent forum, when asked what lessons he could draw from his previous experience - in different circumstances - of Premier League relegation at Luton, Rob Edwards said he concluded that they did not change enough after dropping back to the Championship. Edwards and the chairman Nathan Shi have both indicated they recognise the need to act upon that lesson and do it quickly.
Some supporters are sceptical, concerned about whether the club has the personnel to make the right judgements. Trust was always going to be in short supply after a season of failure, the conditions for which had been allowed to build over several seasons. But failure on this scale now creates the opportunity for a full reset under Edwards, evidently appointed in part for his proven ability to make Championship sides competitive.
Few players enhanced their reputation this season or could have legitimate complaint if the club now seek to move them on. This does presuppose buyers will come forward at acceptable fees, and the balance between holding out for a player's sticker-price and getting deals moving quickly will need to be calibrated differently to other summers. That difference is the premium to pay for a season of ignominy.
There are understandable fears, but hopes too, and you could hear them after the game at Burnley despite a poor second half. The away fans let bygones be bygones, and were generous with their applause, especially to Andre after the welcome surprise news of his new contract.
Andre's tantalising quote in the club's announcement of his new deal read: "With the players who are coming in... I believe it will be a very strong squad in which Rob Edwards will have complete control of the situation."
Very strong, you say? Now say more, Wolves, and say it soon.
'It has felt like one long slog... 1/10' - season report cardpublished at 09:04 BST 27 May
09:04 BST 27 May
Dazzling Dave Fan writer
Image source, Getty Images
Season score out of 10 and overriding emotion?
1/10. This season has been draining. There has been very little to enjoy and far too much frustration. When Erling Haaland has scored as many goals as the entire Wolves team, it says a lot about how the season has gone.
The overriding feeling is disappointment, but also exhaustion. It has felt like one long slog. Wolves have only won three games all season, and that pretty much tells its own story.
A shoutout too to Wolves Women, who gave supporters something positive to celebrate with their promotion to WSL2. The reason it gets at least a 1/10.
Best moment and why?
Beating Liverpool and Aston Villa. It was one of the few times this season when Wolves really lifted the supporters. It felt special because it gave us a proper football moment, not just a result. For a brief spell, it reminded us what this club can feel like when everything clicks.
Player of the season and why?
Joao Gomes. He has been the one player who always kept fighting. We may not have seen the very best of him this season, but that is probably down to the state of the team around him. His energy, heart and determination have stood out. He has cared, and that has mattered.
Unsung hero and why?
Santi Bueno. He has been consistent and has tried to organise the defence. He has also looked like someone trying to become the leader this team needs.
Biggest disappointment?
The whole season. That is what hurts most. The results have been bad enough, but too often Wolves have looked flat and too easy to play against. That is hard for fans to take.
What needs to change this summer?
Recruitment has to be spot on, because it has played a huge part in why we are in this mess. The squad needs better balance, better quality and better leaders.
Major hope for next season?
That Wolves start winning again, play with more joy and give the fans something to feel proud of. This team needs an identity. Winning the Championship and getting back to the Premier League would be the dream, but first we need to feel like ourselves again.
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Abbey's Wolves career blooms after rejecting interestpublished at 17:30 BST 26 May
17:30 BST 26 May
Nick Mashiter Football reporter
Image source, Getty Images
Jerome Abbey rejected Premier League interest to stay at Wolves this season - and it is paying off.
The midfielder became the club's youngest ever Premier League player when he came off the bench in Sunday's draw at Burnley.
Aged 16 years, eight months and eight days he is second youngest player in the club's history - after Jimmy Mullen in 1939.
Abbey had already been pulled out of maths class at Thomas Telford School to become part of the squad to face Bournemouth in February.
This time the call came on Saturday from academy director Jon Hunter-Barrett to tell him he would be training with the first team, before boss Rob Edwards informed him he was part of the squad.
It came as a slight surprise but the England Under-17 international is at Molineux for the long term with the acceptance fighting for a regular first-team squad berth is around 12 months away.
There is a plan for Abbey, who joined the club at just six-years-old, to be integrated consistently into the Under-21s next season but he will join the first team at Compton at the right times.
The physical nature of the Championship is also a consideration, ensuring Abbey is not pushed into consistent first team action too soon.
It is important to recognise he is still studying for his GCSEs but is seen as a grounded and talented individual, who would be able to handle the spotlight of a senior call up.
Abbey is popular at Compton and sources have told BBC Sport he is increasingly happy at Wolves and enthusiastic about his future at the club.
His parents moved from Ghana to the Netherlands and Abbey is eligible to play for both nations but is prioritising his England future.
Brothers Jed, now at Marine, and Jez, who plays for Alvechurch, also came through the Wolves academy while twin brother Jeyden was part of the Shrewsbury set-up this season.
'Wolves deserve to be in the Premier League'published at 11:16 BST 26 May
11:16 BST 26 May
Wolves midfielder Rodrigo Gomes says he "will do everything" he can to help the club return to the Premier League if he stays, but did not confirm whether he would remain for their Championship fight.
"I feel the love from the fans and I really appreciate that," he told BBC Radio WM.
"I promise them that if I stay here I will do everything to help the club get back into the Premier League because it is a big club.
"It has very good people inside the club and very good fans and they deserve to be in the Premier League.
"It's been a difficult season for us and the fans. The fans are really good for us and hopefully next season we will give them more to be happy and to be with us."
'A miserable campaign - but Mane looks a player'published at 08:05 BST 26 May
08:05 BST 26 May
Image source, Getty Images
Now the curtain has come down on the 2025-26 Premier League campaign, here is my end-of-season review - with a look back to what I predicted in August.
Prediction: 18th
Grim. Grim. Grim.
Wolves were another side effectively going out of the Premier League from the early weeks of the season. Their fate was sealed once they lost the real class of Matheus Cunha to Manchester United and Rayan Ait-Nouri to Manchester City.
Vitor Pereira was sacked after failing to win any of the first 10 league games and, while successor Rob Edwards occasionally hinted at better things to come and some optimism next season, this was a miserable campaign.
Teenager Mateus Mane looks a player, but will he stay?
What I said in August: "This prediction is made with a heavy heart, but there have been some damaging departures and not enough quality incomings."
'No pride' and only four should stay - fan views on seasonpublished at 11:28 BST 25 May
11:28 BST 25 May
Image source, Getty Images
We asked for your views as Wolves' miserable season in the Premier League ended with a draw at relegated Burnley.
Here are some of your comments:
Mick: Go back nine years and the future was bright, promises of European campaigns and challenges at the top of the Premier League. Fosun's plans were scuppered from above and the managed decline has come to be. I truly believe the only future for this club is a change of ownership. If they stay I see another relegation.
Wol: Not a very entertaining game. Poor performances from a lot of players. Just glad the season is now over and hope that the transfer window is a success and next season provides us travelling fans with some enjoyment and victories.
Mark: We've been circling the drain for a couple of seasons now, but last summer's woeful transfer activity sealed it. Got rid of our best players and replaced them with lads who didn't have any Premier League experience between them.
Mel: So it's over to you now Rob Edwards! Another dismal performance from a bunch of overrated players. Personally I would retain no more than four of Sunday's team for the Championship fight - Sa, Mane, Armstrong and Andre. As for the rest I wouldn't let sentiment stand in the way, if the supporters can see the way forward I'm sure the gaffer can?
Finally a big shout out to the Wolves fans who have suffered possibly the worst ever season with dire football, no fight and definitely not enough pride in the old gold and black. Out of darkness cometh light.
Steve: See you in League One after next season. Again if the players wanted to play for this club then they would win. It's simple really. No pride, no heart, just picking up a pay check every week. Prove me wrong that's the challenge. After 64 years of supporting this team, prove me wrong.
Robert: Have been 65 years a Wolves supporter. No fight, no heart. They will struggle next season.
Watch Premier League highlights and analysispublished at 07:46 BST 25 May
07:46 BST 25 May
Pundits Alan Shearer and Wayne Rooney join host Kelly Cates to bring you the action and talking points from all 10 fixtures on the final day of the Premier League season.
'Things will be different next season': What Edwards saidpublished at 19:23 BST 24 May
19:23 BST 24 May
Media caption,
Wolves manager Rob Edwards speaking to BBC Match of the Day: "We started the game really well and could've been three or four up. We started the second half poorly and they got back into it. Either side could have won it. You could say a draw was a fair result, but it's frustrating with the start we had.
"Neither team wanted a draw - you could see both were going for it. Both goalkeepers had to make some good saves. We haven't been able to score the goals we need, which has been a problem for us this season.
"But we'll have a new-look group and things will be different next season."
On Mateus Mane: "Always industrious and full of endeavour and enthusiasm. There are things we can keep working on with him, but he's a fantastic young player and it's been a breakthrough season."
On 16-year-old Jerome Abbey: "He's a young player we really like. He's trained with us a number of times this season and an opportunity came up for him - we thought it was the right time. He's an exciting young player, but I want to play it down a bit so we don't put too much pressure on him. He's really, really young, so let's make sure he can enjoy the game."
On his time at the club: "It's been a challenge. In the second half of the season we've been competitive. It's a decent return, but it's not what we wanted. It's been tough, but we've learned a lot. Now I'm really excited about what we can do going forward - that's something we've been talking about with the supporters as well.
"I want to thank them for what has been a really difficult season. We'll have a fresh start now."
On squad planning for the Championship: "We're working hard on that. We don't have definitive answers on every bit of business we want to do. We want to make sure the group we want to keep is here, and that the new players we need to bring in to build this team come in as soon as possible."
Wolves finished the 2025-26 Premier League campaign with just three wins, their lowest total in a league campaign (previous five in 2011-12 in the top flight).
Analysis: Edwards' side fade after bright startpublished at 18:46 BST 24 May
18:46 BST 24 May
Adwaidh Rajan BBC Sport journalist
Image source, Getty Images
Wolves had the chance to leapfrog Burnley and avoid the ignominy of finishing rock bottom with a win on the final day.
That would have given their supporters at least something to cheer about at the end of a miserable campaign, before they start preparations for a first season in the Championship since 2017-18.
But after a strong first half where they were the much better side, generating an expected goals (xG) of 1.45, the visitors faded after the break to more resemble the side that have come up short on so many occasions this season.
They managed just one shot on target in the second half and had their goalkeeper Jose Sa to thank for preserving a point, with the goalkeeper producing a string of saves against a resurgent Burnley, who bombarded his goal with 11 shots after the break.
Manager Rob Edwards now has a busy summer as he prepares for a big rebuild. He would have already identified the players he wants to keep for next season but whether he will be able to keep hold of key figures remains to be seen.
You can also listen to today's 5 Live Premier League commentaries on most smart speakers. Just say "ask BBC Sounds to play Tottenham v Everton" or "ask BBC Sounds to play West Ham v Leeds", for instance.
Sutton's predictions: Burnley v Wolvespublished at 17:14 BST 23 May
17:14 BST 23 May
Since Wolves beat Liverpool on 3 March, these two teams have not managed a single win between them out of a total of 16 games.
Wolves were showing some signs of improvement back then, but they could not sustain it. It's been a horrible season for them.
As for Burnley, well they put up a decent fight against Arsenal on Monday but they still lost - and that is probably the story of their campaign.
So, will either of them give their fans something to smile about on Sunday? Wolves have not won an away league game all season, and I don't see that changing now.
The sensible thing to do here would be to go for a draw but I have got a predictions title to win so I need to take some risks. I am going to back Burnley to edge it.