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Date: Sunday
18th January 2026, 2pm
Live on Sky Sports
Venue: Molineux
Conditions: Circumspect
Programme: £4
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Wolves |
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Newcastle |
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0 - 0 |
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Teams |
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Half time: Wolves 0 Newcastle 0
Full time: Wolves 0 Newcastle 0
Eddie
Howe said:
"We
controlled the game but we didn't have the cutting edge today.
Chance creation was an issue.
"They defended well, very low,
compact and it was difficult for us to find space. We were looking
for a moment of magic from an individual of brilliance or set play.
We had the opportunities as the game went on, but we didn't take
them.
"The endeavour was there, the
effort was there, but maybe the quality wasn't in the final third.
It was a game where we had possession and tried to find a way
through and I think we did better the longer we went on. We were
just looking for a moment and we didn't take it.
"Our ball control was good and
we had a lot of possession. I wanted us to quicken it up at
half-time where we were too slow and we allowed them to get into
their shape. I thought we did that a lot better.
"We were trying and we tried right to the end to win that
game. It was a game of frustration for us. They played very low and
minimised space and we had to have the intention of trying to win
the game in every moment.
"We had a lot of the ball. I thought we didn't do enough with it;
our cutting edge was missing. But I thought we played better the
longer the game went on and I thought the substitutes made a
positive impact. With the ball, I thought we had the control of the
game very early.
"I
don't think our attacking output was good enough. There have been
similar away games, if people want to accuse us of that, that is
totally fair, but we have to find a way to score more goals on the
road.
"I was happy with the attitude, endeavour and the effort but
the overall quality was missing. In games like that you are looking
for an individual moment of brilliance.
"Football is such a strange game, you go back a couple of
weeks and we score four against Leeds and looked free scoring and
could create in any moment. Today was a very different game: It wasn't for the want of trying.
There were some good moments. Some big moments we didn't take.
"It (counter attacking) was always going to be their threat
and we managed it pretty well. They had a few moments in both halves
but good attitude form our players to recover. We protected the goal
well today for the away side, and that is the real positive for
today.
"We are disappointed not to win. When you get a point, you see the
negative but later on you maybe see the positive, who knows. It was
a strong performance today just without the goalmouth action.
"We needed more in attack. I was generally happy with the attitude,
the endeavour, the effort from the players I thought was there but
the quality was missing.
"I think in games like that, you’re looking for one moment of
individual brilliance that wins us a game or a set play. All the way
through, I thought it could come, even to the very last kick, but it
wasn’t to be.”
On the prospect of
any January signings:
"I don't think we have the financial ability to do that."
Rob Edwards - now unbeaten in all three PL meetings
with United as a manager, following a win and a draw when Luton Town boss in
2023/24 - said:
"I’m really proud of
them. It was a really spirited performance, really committed. I thought the lads
were really good without the ball. We had to be against a team like this today
with the quality that they have and controlled the game the way we wanted it
without the ball.
"I thought we limited them
to very little, although I would love us to have a little bit more threat
than going forward, whether it's on the counter, whether we can get a bit
more control in the final third. It wasn’t to be today, but I’m asking a lot
of them in that way, and we’re asking even more of them going forward.
"Overall, I’m delighted with the commitment and the spirit of the team
today, against a very good team. Performances have steadily been trending in
the right direction, but there’s then nothing like results for belief.
"It’s all right me just coming out and saying, ‘We did well, we competed, we
were close’, at least now we are competing and taking something from games.
There’s still a long way to go, but the lads are fighting.
"I just think we’ve been
able to work consistently for a period of time. Now, with hindsight, it was
never, ever going to be a very quick fix, with everything that we’re trying
to address. It just took some time to try and get some of the things right
that we needed to.
"It’s not there yet, but what you can see is a team that’s fighting, they’re
willing to put their bodies on the line, block and head it and tackle and
run hard. Maybe these are some of the things that because of a lack of
confidence and belief you don’t quite get right for whatever reason.
"But again, they’re human and not magnets on a tactics board or robots, and
we all want them to be perfect all the time. I know they’re Premier League
footballers, they’re paid well, but they’re human beings and you can feel
bad and lack confidence, and that can certainly affect performance.
"At the moment we’re starting to feel better about ourselves, and
performances are improving, especially from a defensive point of view, we’ve
had to become more solid. We are growing and we do look like now that we’re
certainly not giving much away, and that gives us the best chance of being
in games to get the points.
"If we can keep it to
zero, we know we’re going to be in the game. That’s two Premier League clean
sheets in a row here at home, and it’s great because that gives us a really
good base.
"You could hear the supporters. They’re with the lads,
they can see the commitment that they’re giving, and then at the end, I
think they appreciate that the lads are fighting.
"We all know that is the
bare minimum, I know that, but it had gone quite bad, especially here, and I
think it was hard for the lads, it was hard for the supporters, and almost
for the supporters to know what to do. Whether to get behind the lads or
not.
"Then for the lads, it was
becoming difficult to play, so it’s taken some time to try and turn things.
We were getting good performances away from home at first, and then we’ve
just gradually started to click. I know it’s not anywhere near where we want
it to be, but from where we were, this is probably quite good form.
"We had to try and build momentum. We want to stay in the league, but
regardless of what happens, we need to be a good place going forward next
season.
"We want to be building momentum, belief, trying to help heal this club, and
build that connection back up with the support base. The supporters are the
most important people at the club, so we’re trying to do all that in the
middle of a Premier League season, which is difficult, but I feel like we’re
making some good steps.
"I know the position that
we’re in. I’ve really wanted this job for a long, long time, so I’d have
loved this 10 years ago as well, but this is the situation that we’re in.
But let’s be really honest and frank about it, I wouldn’t have got it unless
we were in this sort of situation.
"That’s the reality of it,
but I am loving it. I’m loving this opportunity, because it’s an amazing
football club and I feel like we’re having an impact now, and that’s all of
us – the players, the staff that are with me, they’re brilliant and giving
everything.
"We want to try and
continue because it doesn’t get much easier with Manchester City away. I
know they had a difficult one yesterday (losing the Manchester derby),
but these are the games that we want to be involved in.”
22 games in and
Newcastle have 33 points and sit eighth, five less than
2024/25 (when they were fourth), one more than 2023/24 (when
seventh) and eight fewer than 2022/23 (when fourth).
The Magpies have scored ten away goals in 11 PL games, seven
of which came in two outings: four at Everton and three at Burnley.
Their away tally last season was 19 from 11. Current goals
against totals are 12 for the current season compared to 14 in the
opening 11 away games of 2024/25.
Scoreless visits to Aston Villa, Leeds, Bournemouth and Wolves plus
0-1 defeats at the mackems and Manchester United mean that Newcastle have netted in
just five of 11 PL away fixtures so far. That's in stark contrast to
last season, when they scored in 15 of their 19 PL games away from
SJP.
This was the 22nd time that the two clubs have faced each other
in the PL at home or away; Newcastle having scored at least one goal
in each of the previous 21.
There hasn't been a 0-0 draw in any of the last 30 competitive
meetings of Wolves and United since a Second Division fixture at SJP
during February 1991. Less than 19,000 fans saw Paul Stimson
red-carded for grappling with Steve Bull and Paul Moran make his
first- and last - appearance.
This was Newcastle's fourth 0-0 PL draw this season,
all of then on the road. They've reached that total in 11 PL
away games: it took them 53 games to notch the previous
quartet of away 0-0s.
Lewis Miley completed a half century of Premier League
appearances for the club (25 starts).
Mags @ Molineux - PL visits:
2025/26 Drew 0-0
2024/25 Won 2-1 Schar, Barnes
2023/24 Drew 2-2 Wilson 2 (1pen)
2022/23 Drew 1-1 Saint-Maximin)
2021/22 Lost 1-2 Hendrick
2020/21 Drew 1-1 J.Murphy
2019/20 Drew 1-1 Almiron
2018/19 Drew 1-1 Hayden
2011/12 Won 2-1 Ba, Gutierrez
2010/11 Drew 1-1 Carroll
2003/04 Drew 1-1 Shearer

Sunday saw Newcastle extend their unbeaten Premier League run to four
games, following what was a desperately unimpressive draw against the
basement side at a soggy Molineux.
An unrelentingly tedious encounter contained the bare minimum of
goal action: understandable for the hosts who
sit 14 points from safety but less so for the visitors, who could
have ended the day in a season-high fifth with a two goal margin of
victory.
Despite lengthy periods of possession, United failed to
register an effort on target in the first half and were little
better after the break; Jose Sa's progress to a rare
clean sheet never seriously in doubt.
Had this featured on ITV's “Shoot!” programme, the trade
descriptions act may have been invoked.
With four changes from the line-up beaten in the Carabao Cup by
Manchester City in midweek, the blue-clad Magpies managed to be
simultaneously dominant and unthreatening - wing pair Anthony Gordon
and Harvey Barnes labouring to provide anything resembling service
to Nick Woltemade.
The striker whose first United goal divided the sides on
Tyneside last September saw his header from Kieran Trippier's first half
free-kick graze the crossbar, but was otherwise
unproductive.
Sven Botman had also seemed
a certain scorer from a corner before the break but missed from a yard out before the
ball was cleared. The minute that the officials added on seemed
excessive.
Sadly the second period brought little respite for
the away travellers, who had remarkably little on the
field to inspire them. The absence of a playmaker in the United
ranks was evident: build-ups remained laboured and unthreatening
against a side happy to concede territory and possession.
The anticipated treble swap saw the ineffective Woltemade, Gordon
and Tonali replaced by Yoane Wissa, Anthony Elanga and
Lewis Miley; the latter back in
midfield after recent defensive duties.
Those changes - and the repositioning of Barnes to the left flank
after another ineffective outing for the freshly-shorn Gordon - saw a handful of crosses whipped in rather quicker
than before, but there was nobody to get on the end them, Wissa bemusingly
stationing himself outside of the box.
A late upturn did see Trippier fire a free-kick into the side
netting and
Joelinton came close when heading over
a near post corner over with Malick Thiaw standing
behind him and probably better placed. Bruno Guimaraes then had a
presentable chance at the end of six added minutes, but
for once the United captain couldn't fire his side to glory, slicing
harmlessly wide.
Unbeaten in their last three league games after 11 straight losses,
Wolves looked content with a point, Nick Pope untested as those in front of him efficiently
handled occasional
counter-attacks.
Given the daunting run of away games in all competitions that United
now face, it's difficult not to view this as a wasted opportunity to
win away from Tyneside.
A kind view would be that their players were collectively distracted
by Wednesday's Champions League test, but we've seen this mundane
display too often for comfort in what remains a curious season.
Biffa
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