![Justin Kluivert made history with his hat-trick of penalties](https://img.rasset.ie/002173ee-800.jpg)
Justin Kluivert made history with his hat-trick of penalties
**Bournemouth**'s Justin Kluivert became the first player in Premier League history to score a hat-trick of penalties as he inspired a 4-2 win at Wolves.
**Wolves** goalkeeper Jose Sa, who gave away two of the spot-kicks, confronted angry supporters at half-time as the home side’s recent revival was brought to an abrupt halt.
It was a manic afternoon at Molineux which saw four goals in the opening 18 minutes, with Kluivert bagging twice from the spot either side of Milos Kerkez’s goal.
Jorgen Strand Larsen had made it 1-1 and then 3-2 but the Dutchman’s third penalty of the game killed it for the Cherries.
The defeat piles the pressure back on Wolves boss Gary O’Neil, who appeared to have bought himself some time after back-to-back wins over Southampton and Fulham.
Kevin Schade shone as his hat-trick helped **Brentford** dominate **Leicester** 4-1 at the Gtech Community Stadium in the Premier League, showing incoming Foxes boss Ruud van Nistelrooy the size of the job at hand.
Despite Facundo Buonanotte opening the scoring in west London, Yoane Wissa grabbed his eighth of the season before Schade sparkled with three strikes to inflict more misery on the struggling Foxes, who van Nistelrooy will now assume control of.
A victory for Thomas Frank's men helped them back to winning ways following last week’s goalless draw at Everton, with four goals on Saturday putting their season tally to 26 after 13 matches.
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Smooth operator: Kevin Schade hit a hat-trick for Brentford
Chris Wood's second-half penalty was decisive as **Nottingham Forest** returned to winning ways with a 1-0 home Premier League victory over **Ipswich**.
Wood maintained his impressive goalscoring form this season by emphatically converting from the spot soon after the interval to lift Forest up to sixth in the table.
Nuno Espirito Santo’s high-flyers had climbed up to third at the start of this month before back-to-back defeats to Newcastle and Arsenal halted their eye-catching rise.
Daniel Munoz pounced three minutes into added-time to salvage a point for **Crystal Palace** in a 1-1 draw with **Newcastle** at Selhurst Park.
Eddie Howe's men appeared to have bounced back from Monday’s home defeat by West Ham when Marc Guehi’s own-goal put them on the brink of victory.
But Palace, who were unable to convert a host of chances, kept pressing until the end and were rewarded when Munoz headed a cross past keeper Nick Pope at the far post.
It was redemption for the Colombian given he had missed a sitter in the first half as part of a wasteful afternoon from the Eagles.