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From Silence to Fury: Wolves 2-3 Burnley

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Burnley Match reaction Wolves by Always Wolves 36 seconds ago

From Silence to Fury: Wolves 2-3 Burnley

WATCH OUR FAN REACTION IMMEDIATELY AFTER WOLVES DEFEAT TO BURNLEY

Wet, cold, and raw. That was the mood walking out of Molineux after Wolves somehow let a point slip and handed Burnley all three in stoppage time. It felt like one more kick in a long run of them. There was fight in spells and brief hope, but the same old problems cut through everything. The goals we give away, the lack of calm at key moments, the noise around ownership, the growing unrest. It all boiled over.

Post‑Match Mood at Molineux

The ground was soaked and so were the spirits. It was one of those afternoons where the weather mirrored the result. Damp, grey and miserable, with anger starting to simmer by the final whistle.

Paying Respects on Poppy Day

Before any of that, there was a moment of pure class. The military tribute on Poppy Day, with a bugler sounding the Last Post, stopped everyone. It felt weighty and respectful, a reminder of what matters.

There was unity in the stands for that moment, home and away. Both sets of supporters stood in silence and showed full respect.

Breaking Down the Game: A Tale of Two Halves

Wolves offered two faces. The manager said it himself after the last one, and it applied here. A weak first half left a mountain to climb. A braver second half hinted at a comeback, only for late chaos to undo it all.

First Half Struggles, Starting on the Back Foot

The opener was a punch out of nowhere. A straight ball, struck first time, caught Wolves square and flat-footed. That set the tone. The second made Burnley look like prime Brazil, slick and incisive, while Wolves were left looking at each other. Confidence drained and the stands fell silent.

The pattern that hurts most is back again. We gift teams goals, then play catch up. These are unforgivable mistakes when you are desperate for a result.

The weight of the wider run sat heavy too. Fans cited 13 league games without a win, roughly 185 days since the last one. However you put it, that’s a brutal spell.

Second Half Fightback, Energy but No Finish

After the break Wolves were sharper. There was more energy, more territory, and a spell where Molineux believed. One effort rattled the bar, a few skidded inches wide, and Burnley dropped deep trying to hang on.

A penalty offered a lifeline. It was checked, given, and coolly tucked away to change the mood. Not long after, Wolves were level at 2-2. Good work in the build up, a knock-back across goal, and a composed finish. Halftime brought hope.

Then came the sting. For the third time in around nine matches, a late goal took points off Wolves. This one cost the lot. Burnley looked ready to settle for a draw, then snatched it at the death. That empty, stunned sound rang around the stands once more.

As the manager has stressed before, we can’t have two faces, one in the first half and another in the second. Until that changes, these endings will keep happening.

Fan Voices: Raw Emotions from the SOUTH Bank

The reactions were sharp, honest and pained. Everyone could see parts of the performance that were better, but the same hard truths kept flooding back.

Mike’s Take, Spirit but Not Enough

Mike summed it up straight. Dreadful result. Some spirit, some quality, but nowhere near enough. Not scoring enough, not solid enough. People will look to the manager, he said, but the problem feels bigger. He’s now in the Fosun out camp, because the same issues are repeating under the same ownership.

Stan’s Frustration, Fuming Over Avoidable Losses

Stan was simmering. Disappointed and fuming, mainly because the first two were avoidable. He would have taken a draw at 2-0, even at 2-2 late on, but not even that survived. As he put it, something is disastrously wrong somewhere.

Magic’s Disappointment, Can’t Score, Can’t Win

Straight talking from Dad. Wolves played ok in patches but cannot put the ball in the net. He questioned whether the incoming players are good enough. The answer right now, for him, is no. Another season with no win across August, September and October is a damning line. The patience of the fanbase is shot.

End‑Game Flashpoints, Applause and Arguments

At full time, there were two pictures. Fair play to a few who made the full lap and clapped all sides, including those named by fans in the North Bank. But there were also heated scenes by the South Bank. Reports from those seats said there were words between some supporters and the manager, and between some supporters and players. That tells its own story.

There was another sore point. The PA was turned up as supporters tried to air their frustrations after the whistle. Fans had backed the side during the game, then wanted to make their points. Drowning them out felt wrong. Let people be heard.

Add in “Fosun out” banners, chants and a visiting delegation, including senior figures from Fosun’s wider group, and you have a tense day off the pitch too.

Calls for Change: What’s Wrong and How to Fix It?

The themes are familiar. Too many managers, too many players out the door, and a slow slide from top half ambition to bottom half struggle.

Blame Game, Beyond the Manager

The churn in the dugout hasn’t worked. The churn in the squad hasn’t helped either. Plenty of good players have been sold, and the replacements are still finding their level. The one constant through it all is the ownership. That’s why more fans are saying Fosun out.

The slide has taken years. From 7th, 7th, 10th, 13th, 14th and 16th, to a relegation fight again. This looks like managed decline. Sustainability is fine on paper, but a real club is not a computer game. If you hold back too long, it catches up with you.

Ownership and Leadership Issues, Invest or Hand Over

The message from the stands is blunt. Invest in the team and the infrastructure, or hand the baton to someone who will. Letting key players go season after season was always going to tell in the end. Fans can see it, and they are losing faith.

There’s goodwill for the manager as a person. He’s tried to connect and bring a smile back. But long stretches without a win make his position fragile. The club also needs strong executive leadership. The call from fans was clear, get a proper CEO in to run the football club, and let others focus on other parts of the business.

From Silence to Fury: Wolves 2-3 Burnley

Pukka

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