Grealish's Orchestration Undoes Wolves' Desperate Rally
À Voir Score Futmetrix: 66/100. Five goals, three lead changes, and a substitute's redemption arc—this was chaos masquerading as Premier League football.
When Substitutes Change Destinies
Everton arrived at Molineux with a blueprint: press, control, suffocate. Jack Grealish was the architect. His opening act came in the 7th minute—a perfectly weighted pass for Beto's opener that set Intensity levels to suffocating. The Stakes were already crushing for Wolves, languishing in 20th place with three straight defeats. This felt like an execution.
Then Hwang Hee-Chan equalized in the 21st minute. Suddenly, Balance tilted. The lead changed hands three times across 90 minutes—each shift a knife-twist of momentum. Wolves controlled 59% possession yet found themselves chasing a 3-1 deficit by the 55th minute after Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall's clinical finish. Grealish had two assists by then. His third key pass was the game's pulse.
But Intensity demands unpredictability. In the 63rd minute, Rodrigo Gomes entered as substitute. Twelve minutes later, he scored. The 79th-minute goal—assisted by fellow substitute D.M. Wolfe—suddenly made this a one-goal game. Wolves threw bodies forward. Everton held. Just.
The numbers tell the story: Grealish created three key passes, Dewsbury-Hall combined a goal with an assist (8.3 rating), and Gomes' impact from the bench (7.7 rating) proved that Stakes this high demand urgency from everyone. Wolves' 12 shots (4 on target) versus Everton's 10 (4 on target) showed the desperation—more volume, less precision. Everton's xG of 1.93 versus Wolves' 1.11 exposed the quality gap, yet the final scoreline whispered of what-ifs.
For Wolves, this was a moral victory dressed as a defeat. They're still pointless after four games, but this display—trailing 3-1 and clawing back—suggests fight isn't dead. For Everton, Grealish's control under Stakes this high proved why they sit fifth. Chaos resolved into clarity.
Key Questions
What made Jack Grealish the Man of the Match?
Two assists, three key passes, and relentless control under pressure. He orchestrated Everton's rhythm while Wolves chased desperately. Pure midfield mastery.
What caused the 5-goal thriller?
Early Everton control (3-1 lead by 55') met desperate Wolves substitutes. Gomes and Wolfe changed the game's texture. Chaos, not quality, drove goals.
What does this mean for Wolves's season?
Still pointless after four games. But fighting back from 3-1 down proves spirit exists. Survival demands consistency, not just late-game heroics.
Pourquoi ce match est noté 66/100 ?
Notre algorithme Futmetrix a analysé l'intensité, l'équilibre et l'enjeu. Le score de 66/100 place ce match dans la catégorie "À Voir".