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Wolves v Manchester City: Premier League – live


Key events

Talking of City, they welcome back Nathan Aké – he’s on the bench – as is Manuel Akanji, who picked up a minor knock on international duty. As such, Stones comes in at centre-back, while Jeremy Doku and Savinho are handed starts on the wings, Phil Foden and Jack Grealish kept in reserve.

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O’Neil is, of course, without Yerson Mosquera, Sasa Kalajdzic, Enso González, Bastein Meupiyou, Boubacar Traoré – and now Hwang Hee-chan, injured playing for South Korea and out for around a month. Consequently, Matheus Cunha and Jørgen Strand Larsen start up front, and have the ability to give John Stones and Ruben Dias a testing afternoon.

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O’Neil tells Sky that Sam Johnstone got injured in training, so José Sa comes in – and has been pushing for selection. Morale, he says is fine – Wolves have had a tough run of fixtures and generally played well, though the effort last time out, against Brentford, was unacceptable. Though today is a hard game, they believe they can turn things around and, having won this fixture last year, they know what’s required and how well they have to play to win.

Otherwise, he’s taking the risk out of the buildup because his players don’t need complexity currently, but that’s not why he’s gone to five at the back – he’s always done that against City. Finally, he’s not bothered about Guardiola or any other manager saying Wolves are good – they just need to play well.

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Teams!

Wolverhampton Wanderers: (3-5-2) Sa; Bueno, Dawson, Gomes T; Semedo, Gomes J, André, Lemina, Ait-Nouri; Cunha, Larsen. Subs: Bentley, Doherty, R Gomes, Doyle, Sarabia, Forbs, Bellegarde, Guedes, Lima.

Manchester City (4-1-4-1): Ederson; Lewis, Stones, Dias, Gvardiol; Kovacic; Sávio, Gundogan, Bernardo, Doku; Haaland. Subs: Ortega Moreno, Carson, Ake, Grealish, Akanji, Nunes, Foden, O’Reilly, McAtee.

Referee: Chris Kavanagh (Manchester)

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Preamble

That the league table doesn’t lie is one of football’s truest truisms. There is a metric specifically designed to tell us which team deserves to win a match – it’s better known as “the score” – and these results are then collated into a precise overall ranking which brooks no argument. It sounds simple because it is.

And yet! Wolves, the aforementioned table tells us, are the second-worst team in it, their one point from seven games two fewer than Crystal Palace who sit above them and the same as Southampton who lie below. But the sense persists that they aren’t, or at least shouldn’t be that bad, and as such Gary O’Neil is under severe pressure.

He will not expect any favours from Manchester City. Just as Wolves are more than a number in a column so too are the champions, the relentless accumulation of the early Guardiola years replaced by the sinister certainty that will do that whatever it takes to finish one place above their nearest challenger. And with Arsenal having been beaten yesterday, they will know that today offers them the opportunity to emphasise that punishing reality.

Wolves, though, have the tools to trouble them – particularly in midfield, where their drive and physicality can make things uncomfortable for any team, never mind one still working out how to cope without the best midfielder in the world. If they can start quickly and defend properly, this could be an intense and competitive contest; if they cannot, they are in even more trouble than the league table suggests.

Kick-off: 2pm BST

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