Last updated 25 April 2026. Seven days out from Saturday's fixture at Molineux Stadium, the picture for this match is becoming clearer, and what it shows is not particularly encouraging for Wolves. They sit 20th in the Premier League, having conceded 61 goals across their league campaign so far. That number is not just a statistic. It is a structural diagnosis. Sunderland, sitting 11th, have scored 36 and conceded 40. The gap in defensive organisation between these two sides is the central story of this match.
The Structural Problem at Molineux
Watch this. When you look at Wolves' defensive record across the season, 61 goals against is not the result of bad luck or a rough patch. That is a coaching issue. There is a pattern inside those numbers that tells you something is wrong at the level of preparation and structure. The triggers that should be organising their defensive shape are either not there or not being executed consistently enough to hold a back line together under sustained pressure.
The thing nobody is talking about is how Wolves' defensive problems become most acute when opponents have a clear reference point in behind. Their back line tends to step without a coordinated trigger, which leaves space between the lines and behind the defence in the same moment. A team with movement and purpose in their forward play will find that gap repeatedly. Sunderland, with 36 goals scored this season, have enough variety and intent up front to identify and attack exactly that kind of invitation.
What Sunderland Bring Tactically
Rewind to the detail in Sunderland's numbers. Thirty-six goals scored, 40 conceded, and an 11th-place finish that reflects a team with genuine quality in certain areas but some inconsistency in others. The goals-against figure tells you they are not a side that simply sits deep and absorbs. They are willing to be open, and that makes them interesting when they travel to a side like Wolves who have shown they can be exposed.
The pattern Sunderland have shown this season is one of direct, purposeful movement in transition. When they win the ball back in midfield, they look to play forward quickly. Against a Wolves side whose defensive structure has been fragile at the best of times, that kind of game plan is well suited to the occasion. The preparation for this match, from Sunderland's perspective, will involve understanding where those defensive triggers are missing and how to exploit the space that opens up as a result.
Set Pieces and the Detail That Decides It
This is where I want to focus particular attention ahead of Saturday. Wolves have conceded 61 goals. A proportion of those will have come from set pieces, and for a side with those numbers, their delivery and defensive organisation from dead balls deserves close scrutiny. Sunderland will have done their homework here. Any team preparing to face a side at the foot of the table looks at set-piece vulnerabilities early in the week, and with seven days to go, that preparation will be well advanced.
The reference point from corners and free kicks for Sunderland will be the near post, where late movement can separate defenders who are already uncertain about their positioning. If Sunderland have a set-piece pattern built around that movement, they have the right fixture to run it against.
Prediction and Probabilities
With the data available at this point, the prediction probabilities for Saturday's match shape up as follows. A Sunderland win is the most likely outcome, carrying a probability of approximately 48 percent. A draw lands at around 27 percent. A Wolves home win sits at 25 percent. Those numbers reflect both the league position gap and the goal difference context. Sunderland are not a dominant side but they are a functional one, and functionality is exactly what Wolves have lacked this season.
The early betting odds available for this fixture are pricing a Sunderland win in the region of 2.10, a draw around 3.40, and a Wolves win at approximately 3.50. Those odds feel about right given the underlying picture. The market has read the defensive record correctly.
Betting Angle
I only tip when I have a clear view, and this week I have one. Sunderland to score in both halves is the market that interests me most here. A Wolves side that has conceded 61 goals does not tend to find a way to make themselves harder to break down in the second half when they go behind. The pattern this season suggests that once the defensive structure cracks, it stays cracked. Sunderland scoring across both halves is a genuine possibility, not a hope.
The second angle worth considering is Sunderland first goalscorer from a set piece. Given what I have outlined about Wolves' vulnerability from dead balls and Sunderland's preparation time ahead of this fixture, the value in a specific set-piece goalscorer market is worth exploring. The odds will be generous. The reasoning is sound.
I would leave the Wolves clean sheet market alone entirely. Sixty-one goals conceded tells you everything you need to know about the likelihood of them keeping one here.
Early Team News
No confirmed team news has been released by either club at this stage, which is expected seven days from the fixture. Both squads will complete the week's training before likely disclosures toward the end of the week. Watch for any updates from either side on fitness concerns, particularly in the Wolves back line where personnel changes can affect an already fragile defensive structure in ways that compound the problems already visible in their numbers.
Final Assessment
This is a match where the preparation, the game plan, and the structural detail all point in one direction. Wolves' defensive record is not something that resolves itself in a single match, and Sunderland are a side with enough movement and purpose to find the space that record suggests is available. Saturday at Molineux is a fixture Sunderland will approach with confidence and a clear plan. Whether Wolves can find enough of a reference point at the other end to make it uncomfortable for them is the only genuine question remaining.


