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Wolves vs West Ham: Late Strikes Send Hammers Home — Wolves Win 3–2 in Carabao Cup Drama

Wolves vs West Ham

Wolves came from behind to beat West Ham 3–2 in the Carabao Cup with two late goals to sink the Hammers. Full recap, tactics, lineups, and what’s next.

Wolves vs West Ham: Quick summary

Wolverhampton Wanderers overturned an early deficit to beat West Ham United 3–2 at Molineux in a tense Carabao Cup second-round tie. Two late goals — including a dramatic quick double — swung the match in Wolves’ favour and sent the Hammers out of the competition. The result gives Wolves momentum and a morale boost, while it raises fresh questions around West Ham’s early-season form and squad rotation under Graham Potter.

Match report — how it happened

The fixture started tightly, with both teams testing each other in midfield and using the cup to rotate squad options. West Ham struck first through a set-piece header from Lucas Paquetá that looked to have handed the visitors control. Wolves responded before half-time when Rodrigo Gomes bundled home after good pressure inside the box, and the match swung into a tactical chess match after the interval.

The defining sequence came late: West Ham reclaimed the lead early in the second half through a powerful Paquetá header from a Jarrod Bowen cross, only for Wolves to turn the game on its head in the final quarter. Two rapid goals — one from Jørgen Strand Larsen (his first) and another in the closing stages — gave Wolves a 3–2 advantage that they held to full-time. The atmosphere at Molineux exploded as the home side celebrated progression in the Carabao Cup.

 

Key performers

Wolves

West Ham

Tactical breakdown

Wolves’ approach

West Ham’s blueprint (and where it faltered)

What this means for both teams

Wolves

West Ham

Standout tactical moment

The crucial sequence arrived after West Ham had briefly regained control; Wolves’ quick width exploit followed by near-instant central switch allowed Strand Larsen to receive in the box untracked. That single passage — from defensive regain to clinical finish — shows why modern cup ties hinge on transition sharpness and concentration during moments of turnover. Analysts noted the rapidity of Wolves’ counterattack as a lesson in efficient chance creation.

 

Managerial decisions and substitutions

Fan & media reaction

Matchday live blogs and social coverage captured a rollercoaster of emotions — frustration from visiting supporters and elation inside Molineux. National outlets highlighted the late turnaround as one of the day’s more dramatic Carabao Cup results, praising Wolves’ resilience and pointing to West Ham’s early-season inconsistencies. Discussion on platforms like X (Twitter) centred on Strand Larsen’s sudden impact and Potter’s rotation choices.

What to watch next

Background context: Carabao Cup significance

The Carabao Cup (EFL Cup) is often a proving ground—an opportunity for clubs to rotate and test squad depth while chasing silverware that offers a European route for the winner. For mid-table and mid-tier Premier League teams, a successful cup run can inject belief and provide competitive minutes to emerging talents; for bigger squads it’s a balancing act between rotation and maintaining form across multiple competitions. This tie exemplified that tension: tactical rotation on one side, youth and bite on the other.

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