βA wonderfully sweet, if short, spell of recent history. His impact will forever be celebrated, and certainly not forgotten.β
https://t.co/hqtm1eWrrK
One of the most principled & dignified people I ever had the pleasure to work with. He was never one for small talk but always respectful.
His role in turning round the slump of back to back relegations can never be underestimated
Thoughts to all his family & friends
Wolves are devastated to learn of the passing of our former manager Kenny Jackett.
Kenny led the club to its incredible record-breaking League One title and laid the foundations for the club as we know it today.
The thoughts of everyone at Wolves are with Kennyβs family and friends at this time π
When you step down as club commentator and then this happens ππ
Amazing signing and full credit to those within the club being brave and bold to even attempt it.
Keep it up Wolves
Pound for pound one of the all time greats, his contribution during the rise was essential, his character & desire to win evident & the longevity of his Wolves career may never be replicated
πthanks for your contribution Doc
@wolvesjxp Black shorts and socks is too much, if youβre going black shorts at most Iβd take a tick black top to the sock or maybe even a hoop design as a cheeky nod to the past but not all black
The Alchemy of 1877. ππ€
The 2026/27 Wolverhampton Wanderers Home Kit.
This is more than a shirt. It's a piece of the city.
For this special anniversary edition, the modern Wolves badge makes way for the Wolverhampton coat of arms - a crest carrying centuries of civic identity. Last seen on a Wolves shirt between 1993 and 1996, it famously graced the kit on that legendary 1960 FA Cup Final. And this marks the first time it has returned since Wolverhampton was granted city status in 2000.
The fabric itself tells the story. SUDU has engineered a bespoke two-colour weave with a graphic drawn directly from the city coat of arms.
Club and City. Forged together.
Available Tomorrow
@Wolfus1492 The rapid rise & European football ahead of schedule brought financial constraints worsened by failures in the transfer market (likes of Cutrone) & they didnβt know what the prognosis was on Raul
Vitinha was the right player at the wrong time
That final felt eerily similar to that muggy night in Duisburg, the clash of footballing styles & the inevitable defeat for the English team.
Losing that QF changed Nuno, it was the end of βthe ideaβ that had carried Wolves from Championship to the verge of Champions League
@Wolfus1492 Vitinha would have been Moutinhos successor but without Raul the outlook changed. Nuno didnβt play with a 10 so MGW was never going to feature as he wanted
The irony of that game by the way was Nuno realised his team needed to be better in possession, the player he signed to control games barely played & yet heβs just won back to back champions leagues.
Still, weβll always have Chorley away
The short break & disastrous window that followed started a decline that ultimately got us to this seasons relegation.
Oh what could have been if Raul had scored that pen
@madalexander62 Yeah 2 legs you fancied us against anyone that year, hard with fans not being there for people to understand just how hot and humid it was in the stadium, chasing Sevilla for 90 mins broke everyone
The post match reflections from yesterday including our goodbye to the Premier League
Matchday Live Extra: The end of a Premier League chapter https://t.co/OblmCckIWQ
@lrbarron98 Spurs new stadium is the best in the country by a distance, plus we always seem to do well there π Man City for comfort & view
London stadium is awful, always hated goodison for lack of space, palace has awful view
On the way to Burnley for the last dance.
The battle for 19th is surely gripping the nation.
Iβm in the media van so free to answer questions, feel free to ask away to kill some time as we head north π