This will be the last update until mid-November as I’ll be going on holiday with my good wife to Vanuata for 2 weeks.
It will be a welcome break as working on this channel has been totally consuming for the last 5 months. It’s certainly more work than what I expected.
The channel now has well over 1,500 matches/videos.
I have another 450 matches from seasons 2015/16 to 2024/25 all uploaded and scheduled to be released from November 16th to December 16th.
Focus when I get back will be working on the website development plus a number of goals compilations and, of course, another Wolves Top 20 Goals By Decade which will be featuring the 2000s (seasons 1999/00 to 2008.09) - note to Quirk.
I’ve also fine tuned the logo and banner for the site - which also requires the thumbnail for each video to be updated as well (work has started on that in the last couple of days).
Today’s update:
2014/15 Season (49 matches)
Season Summary:
Championship = 7th.
FA Cup = 3rd Round.
League Cup = 1st Round.
Top Goalscorer = Nouha Dicko & Bakary Sako (15).
Fans' Player Of The Season = Richard Stearman.
Players' Player Of The Season = Richard Stearman.
Incomings were light during the off season with the only major signing being George Saville from Chelsea for £1M during August.
Wolves started the season well and after 15 games had only lost 2 and were sitting 4th place well set in the play-off positions.
However, a disastrous November saw them lose 5 consecutive games conceding 16 goals whilst only scoring 2 which saw them slide down to be mid-table and way out of contention for the play-offs.
By Christmas, results were starting to pick up and with return from injury of Nouha Dicko, Wolves went on a 4 match winning that now put them on the fringes of the play-offs.
In January Wolves bought Benik Afobe from Arsenal for £2M and with Dicko and Bakary Sako proved to be a lethal threesome upfront for the remainder of the season.
January also saw a memorable FA Cup 3rd Round replay in the snowstorm against Fulham where the visitors equalised in added time of extra-time and then went onto win the tie on penalties.
Another winning streak of 4 games which culminated with the pulsating 4-3 win at home against Leeds United saw Wolves finally enter the play-off positions.
However, Wolves immediately suffered two consecutive losses - at local rivals Birmingham City and promotion contenders Middlesbrough - that dropped them again down to 8th.
After a home match against fellow play-off challenger Ipswich Town, managed by former Wolves manager Mick McCarthy, finished 1–1, Wolves were left needing to hope that teams above them would drop sufficient points in the final two rounds of games to allow them back into the top 6.
Although Wolves won their final two games to catch Ipswich and Brentford on points, their goal difference proved insufficient to overtake either team. Wolves’ final tally of 78 points was the highest-achieved to date by a team that did not qualify for the play-offs since their introduction. In 7th place, they were also only 12 points from the champions AFC Bournemouth.
Bar the awful period of November, Wolves had played some of their best attacking football since the halcyon days of Steve Bull, but to fall so close into reaching the play-offs was a bitter pill to swallow. With their potency in attack they would have been s serious threat to any team in the play-offs.
However, it would be remiss to blame their failure on this period. Earlier in the season, against Millwall, they were 3-0 up with 23 minutes to go only to draw 3-3. Also a last-minute equaliser at Reading denied them another win.
Still, after the humiliations of 2011/12 and 2012/13 Kenny Jacket was continuing his success of restoring pride and a winning culture back into the club.