Wolves have sacked head coach Vitor Pereira after his team took just two points from their first 10 matches of the season, leaving the Premier League’s bottom club at severe risk of relegation to the Championship. Wolves, eight points adrift of top-flight safety, last played in the second tier in 2017-18.
Pereira, who salvaged the club’s Premier League status last season after succeeding Gary O’Neil in December, conceded Saturday’s 3-0 defeat at Fulham was the worst performance of his 11-month reign. Wolves have lost eight of their 10 league matches this season and last won a top-flight game in April.
Pereira signed a new three-year contract on 18 September but just 45 days on, the Portuguese Premier League manager of the year candidate last season has been dismissed. It is understood the severance package due to Pereira is not significantly different to his previous contract, which expired in June 2026.
Wolves were reluctant to sack Pereira despite an abysmal start because they sought stability after a churn of managers since Nuno Espírito Santo’s departure in 2021, before acknowledging that was unachievable after another alarming collapse. Wolves have conceded a division-leading 22 goals this season, including eight in their past three matches.
O’Neil pointed towards a challenging schedule in mitigation of their poor start last season, Wolves facing eight of the teams who qualified for Europe in their opening 10 matches, plus Brighton and Brentford, both of whom finished in the top 10. This season, Wolves have lost to all three promoted teams, Leeds, Burnley and Sunderland, while Fulham were 17th before victory at Craven Cottage.
Fosun, the Chinese conglomerate that owns Wolves, accept there are issues with the makeup of the squad as a result of the summer recruitment and recognise, in hindsight, Pereira perhaps had too much autonomy. In June Wolves appointed Domenico Teti, an ally of Pereira’s, to the role of director of football after the pair worked together at Saudi Pro League club Al Shabab, his previous club.
Wolves signed six players at a cost of about £90m, none of whom arrived with experience of the Premier League. It was a window in keeping with their model to sign typically young players with a potentially high resale value. That has generally served them well but left them short of experience.
Pereira favoured the £24m signing of Tolu Arokodare instead of a winger and rejected the chance to sign the former Burnley captain Josh Brownhill, a free agent. In the summer Wolves rebalanced the wage structure of the squad, with high-earners such as Pablo Sarabia and Gonçalo Guedes offloaded, a step towards Fosun’s plan of making Wolves self-sustainable.
It was felt as long as Pereira maintained the belief of the squad that he could eventually steer clear of relegation and could continue in his post. A series of scattergun selections, including the dropping of purportedly key players in the Brazilian pair Andre and Joao Gomes from midfield, and the heaviness of defeat of a vital match at Craven Cottage has forced the hand of the ownership. His growing unpopularity among fans had also become a significant issue.
Wolves supporters had turned on Pereira during their stoppage-time defeat at home to Burnley last month, after which he confronted irate fans. Jørgen Strand Larsen, who signed a new contract after Wolves rejected bids from Newcastle totalling £55m in September, also tried to reason with supporters, while goalkeeper José Sá had a direct exchange with fans outside the Molineux players’ car park.
Pereira had to be restrained by stewards before being led away by club captain Toti Gomes, among those dropped in recent weeks as he searched for a winning formula. The 57-year-old had implored supporters to keep the faith. “If we fight with them, united, we can win games, we can compete and achieve our targets,” he said. “If not, without them, it’s impossible.”
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13 hours ago
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