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Wolverhampton Wanderers’ wait for a first win of the Premier League season continued as they were pegged back in an entertaining 2-2 draw with Crystal Palace at Molineux.

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Wolverhampton Wanderers’ wait for a first win of the Premier League season continued as they were pegged back in an entertaining 2-2 draw with Crystal Palace at Molineux.Trevoh Chalobah put Palace ahead on the hour mark, only for his error to allow Jorgen Strand Larsen in for a 67th-minute equaliser.

Joao Gomes then put Wolves ahead five minutes later, but they were denied a vital win by Palace skipper Marc Guehi.

He was alive to convert at the back post after Daniel Munoz flicked on a corner, keeping Palace four points clear of Wolves in 17th.

Gary O’Neil’s side remain bottom after Southampton recorded their first win of 2024-25 against Everton earlier in the day, ahead of a huge clash between the division’s bottom two clubs next week.

How the match unfolded

Craig Dawson made a brilliant block to keep out Will Hughes’ attempt six minutes in, before Jean-Philippe Mateta had a glorious opportunity to put Palace ahead. He had the goal at his mercy after Guehi fluffed his lines, but his close-range volley struck his team-mate.

Dean Henderson then denied Pablo Sarabia twice either side of half-time, diving at the Spaniard’s feet and later taking his shot in the face after good work from Matheus Cunha.

But Palace hit the front on the hour mark when Larsen headed Hughes’ cross away from his goalkeeper Jose Sa, allowing Chalobah to drill into an unguarded net from an angle.

However, after Ismaila Sarr then squandered two golden chances to extend Palace’s lead, Chalobah missed Santiago Bueno’s searching pass, allowing Cunha to square for Larsen to finish.

Wolves completed the turnaround after five further minutes as substitute Goncalo Guedes teed up Gomes to find the bottom-right corner, but there was to be a twist in the tale.

Munoz took advantage of some static set-piece defending to flick a corner through to Guehi, who tapped into an empty net, and things almost got better for Palace in stoppage time, only for Mateta to see a close-range finish chalked off for a foul on Sa.

O’Neil rues defensive errors

The story of Wolves’ season so far has largely been one of defensive errors. In last week’s 2-2 draw with Brighton and Hove Albion, they became just the third team in Premier League history to ship 25 goals through their first nine matches of a season.

Following a disappointing start to the season, O’Neil was under pressure to deliver a win at the 10th time of asking, only for more lax defending to cost his team.

Larsen took the ball away from his own goalkeeper to give Chalobah a gaping goal for the opener, then Guehi was granted the freedom of the six-yard box to score Palace’s second.

Only once have Wolves ever gone more games without a win to start a top-flight campaign, failing to win any of their first 14 matches in 1983-84.

Next week’s clash with Southampton – who got off the mark by beating Everton 1-0 on Saturday – is an important one.

Mixed emotions for Palace

Having been a goal down with just 13 minutes remaining, with Wolves buoyant after turning the game on its head in five second-half minutes, Palace might on one hand be glad to leave Molineux with a point.

However, Oliver Glasner’s men could easily have left the West Midlands with all three.

In the seven minutes that separated Chalobah’s opener and Larsen’s leveller, Sarr spurned two excellent opportunities to double their advantage, firing over from the centre of the box then curling wide after a misplaced pass from Nelson Semedo.

They then thought they had won it in stoppage time, only for Wolves to receive a huge reprieve. The VAR confirmed Anthony Taylor’s on-field decision to disallow Mateta’s potential winner, penalising Munoz for a collision with Sa as he made a late run into the area.

While the Eagles have taken four points from their last two games, they might feel frustrated ahead of fixtures against Fulham, Aston Villa and Newcastle United.

Club reports

Wolves report | Crystal Palace report

Match officials

Referee: Anthony Taylor. Assistants: Gary Beswick, Adam Nunn. Fourth official: Simon Hooper. VAR: Paul Tierney. Assistant VAR: Ian Hussin.

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