Gulf News

Wolves are back

SHOULDN’T BE ANY LIMITS TO OUR GOALS, SPORTING DIRECTOR SAYS

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Back in Premier League after six years, the promoted club will aim to make their presence felt in the next season

It was a promotion push funded in China, mastermind­ed in Portugal, and realised in an industrial city in central England. Wolverhamp­ton Wanderers are back in the English Premier League after a six-year absence and the club has taken a very global route to get there. A contentiou­s one, too. The fact that Wolves’ best player, Portugal midfielder Ruben Neves, joined the club after swapping the bright lights of the Champions League for the gruelling churn of England’s second-tier League Championsh­ip demonstrat­es that this is no normal promotion story.

So does the involvemen­t of so-called “super-agent” Jorge Mendes, whose close links to Wolves’ owner — Chinese conglomera­te Fosun Internatio­nal — has given him vast influence at the club. Seven of Mendes’ clients are at Wolves, including Neves — the record signing for £15.8 million (Dh83.15 million) from Portuguese giants Porto — and manager Nuno Espirito Santo, the former coach of Porto.

Throw in Fosun’s spending power and it was hardly a level playing field when Wolves began their bid for promotion last August, starting out with a 1-0 home win over Middlesbro­ugh. Eight months later, they sealed a return to the Premier League last weekend with four matches to spare in one of the most convincing second-tier campaigns in years. “Promotion into the Premier League is a major, major component part of where we want to take this club, but this is not the end,” Wolves managing director Laurie Dalrymple said. “We want to get in the Premier League and compete strongly for a long time. We want to position ourselves in the very elite of English football. “There shouldn’t be any limits to our goals here.”

Wolves’ sporting director, Kevin Thelwell, said: “We are not keen to put a ceiling on it really, it’s almost dare-todream stuff,” he said. “With the squad we’ve got, the age of the players, the coach we’ve got, sky’s the limit really.”

Wolves proved to be far too good for their rivals in the Championsh­ip — and one moment, sprinkled with stardust, exemplifie­d that last week.

Neves scored a goal for the ages in a 2-0 win over Derby at Molineux, teeing the ball up for himself 30 metres out before delivering a looping volley into the top corner. It showed just why the 21-year-old midfielder became the youngest Champions League captain of all time in 2015 when he skippered Porto against Maccabi Tel Aviv and also why the likes of Liverpool and Chelsea were reportedly interested in him before his surprise switch to Wolves.

Neves in form

Neves hopes his form earns him a place in Portugal’s squad for the World Cup in Russia, and intends to stay with Wolves for their first season back in the Premier League since 2012.

“I am happy here and if it’s possible I’d like to stay here for my first year in the Premier League,” said Neves, who has won five caps for Portugal.

That must be music to the ears of Wolves supporters who saw their team plunge to backto-back relegation­s in 2012 and 2013 to end up in the third tier.

After that, they had four managers in four years until the arrival in May 2017 of Santo, a former profession­al goalkeeper and a close friend and first-ever client of Mendes.

By then, Fosun had showed its intentions by signing winger Helder Costa from Benfica for £13 million. Others to arrive were striker Diogo Jota, on loan from Atletico Madrid, and former Benfica youth player Ivan Cavaleiro from Monaco.

Wolves won three top-flight titles in the 1950s and the last of its four FA Cups in 1960. The fans believe the good times are returning, with full houses of 30,000 fans at Molineux this season testament to that.

We want to get in the Premier League and compete strongly for a long time. We want to position ourselves in the very elite of English football.” Laurie Dalrymple » Wolves Managing Director

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 ?? AP ?? Wolverhamp­ton Wanderers players celebrate after winning promotion to the English Premier League after the Sky Bet Championsh­ip match at Molineux, Wolverhamp­ton.
AP Wolverhamp­ton Wanderers players celebrate after winning promotion to the English Premier League after the Sky Bet Championsh­ip match at Molineux, Wolverhamp­ton.

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