Anfield Index
·3 de marzo de 2026
Match Report: Liverpool stunned by Wolves in embarrasing defeat

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Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·3 de marzo de 2026

Wolverhampton Wanderers delivered one of the shocks of the 2026 Premier League season, beating reigning champions Liverpool 2-1 at Molineux Stadium in front of 30,247 supporters.
For a club rooted to the bottom of the Premier League table, this was a night of defiance and belief. For Liverpool, chasing European places under Arne Slot, it was another reminder that football rarely follows the script.
At half time, it stood at 0-0. Liverpool controlled possession without incision. Wolves, organised and patient, waited for their moment.
It arrived in the 78th minute. Rodrigo Gomes finished confidently after being set up by T. Arokodare, sending the home crowd into full voice. Molineux sensed opportunity. The Premier League champions were wobbling.
Yet champions tend to respond. Mohamed Salah, reliable as ever, equalised in the 83rd minute. A swift move, a composed finish, and suddenly Liverpool were back on level terms at 1-1. The narrative tilted once more.
Football often saves its sharpest twist for the final act. In the 94th minute, Andre struck from distance. The effort took a telling deflection off Joe Gomez and looped beyond the stranded goalkeeper. Chaos followed. Wolves 2-1 Liverpool.
Andre scored a 94th-minute winner as bottom club Wolves beat the defending Premier League champions Liverpool.
For the fifth time this season, Arne Slot’s side conceded an injury time winner. That statistic alone will concern a manager who led Liverpool to the Premier League title in 2024-25. Fine margins have defined their campaign, and once again they found themselves on the wrong side of them.

Photo: IMAGO
This was only Wolves’ third league win of the season, though notably their second in five days. Rob Edwards’ side may still appear destined for relegation, sitting 11 points from safety, yet recent home performances suggest a team unwilling to surrender quietly. They have beaten Liverpool, overcome Aston Villa and drawn with Arsenal in their past three matches at Molineux.
The last time the bottom placed Premier League side beat the competition’s reigning champions came back in October 2017. History, then, was against them. On this occasion, history bent.
For Liverpool, the opportunity was clear. Victory would have taken them level on 51 points with Manchester United and Aston Villa, third and fourth respectively. Instead, they remain fifth, their Champions League ambitions complicated by dropped points in matches they would ordinarily expect to manage.
The Premier League rarely lacks drama, and this contest encapsulated its unpredictability. Wolves, bottom of the table, found resilience and conviction. Liverpool, established and ambitious, found frustration.
Slot’s side had spells of authority but lacked control when it mattered most. Wolves, for all their league struggles, showed clarity in decisive moments. In tight Premier League fixtures, that often proves decisive.
As the season enters its final stretch, the ramifications may linger. Wolves cling to hope. Liverpool must rediscover composure. At Molineux, under the lights, the table said one thing, the result said another.









































