Squad sheets: Wolverhampton Wanderers v Newcastle United

Chris Hughton played with Mick McCarthy with the Republic of Ireland, and is looking to follow his lead again in management. McCarthy established promoted Wolves in the Premier League last season, when they finished a comfortable 15th, and Hughton admits he would settle for that with Newcastle, who lost 3-0 to Manchester United, then hit Aston Villa for six last Sunday. In searching for consistency, Hughton has signed the Ivory Coast’s Cheik Tioté, from FC Twente, and is pursuing half a dozen more reinforcements, including Robbie Keane [Spurs], Hatem Ben Arfa [Marseilles] and John Utaka [Portsmouth]. He also hopes to keep contract rebel Steven Taylor. Meanwhile, Sol Campbell is still short of match fitness and Taylor and Dan Gosling are under treatment. Wolves have signed Chelsea’s Michael Mancienne on loan for a third season, and he goes straight into today’s squad. Joe Lovejoy

Venue Molineux, Saturday 3pm

Tickets £30-40 (0871 222 1877)

Last season n/a

Referee S Attwell

This season’s matches 1 Y4, R0, 4.00 cards per game

Odds Wolves 6-4 Newcastle 21-10 Draw 23-10

Wolves

Subs from Hennessey, Fletcher, Zubar, Halford, Mancienne, Elokobi, Stearman, Guédioura, Mujangi Bia, Mouyokolo, Milijas, Edwards, Kightly

Doubtful Edwards (groin), Fletcher (ankle), Mouyokolo (hamstring), Van Damme (ankle)

Injured Kightly (match fitness, 11 Sep), Hunt (foot, Oct)

Suspended None

Form guide DW

Disciplinary record Y2 R0

Leading scorers Ebanks-Blake, Fletcher, Jones 1

Newcastle

Subs from Krul, R Taylor, Tavernier, Lovenkrands, Ameobi, Ranger, Kadar, Donaldson, Vuckic, Ferguson, LuaLua

Doubtful None

Injured Guthrie (knee, 11 Sep), Xisco (groin, 11 Sep), Campbell (match fitness, 26 Sep), S Taylor (shoulder, Oct), Simpson (ankle, Nov), Gosling (knee, Mar)

Suspended None

Form guide WL

Disciplinary record Y5 R0

Leading scorer Carroll 3

Match pointers

• Wolves have not lost at home to Newcastle since April 1990, when Kevin Scott scored the game’s only goal

• Newcastle have lost their last four away games in the Premier League, failing to score on each occasion

• Karl Henry has been fouled nine times this season – more than any other player

• Newcastle have allowed their opponents only four shots on target so far this season but have still managed to concede three goals

• Wolves scored fewer goals at home (13) than any other top-flight side last season

Premier LeagueWolverhampton WanderersNewcastle Unitedguardian.co.uk

Wolves’ Sylvan Ebanks-Blake ensures another false start for Everton

• Home side booed off after Wolves nearly snatch win
• ‘One point from two games not good enough’ – Mikel Arteta

Everton’s rich history is now told in a continuous seam of panels around Goodison Park, from their formation in 1878 to the present day. 2011, they hope, will record the first trophy of David Moyes’s reign and a season befitting the club’s finest squad since the 1987 panel showing Kevin Ratcliffe with the league title. So far it would simply read: ‘another false start’.

The ‘Everton Timeline’ – as it is called – is certainly effective, as collisions between fans with their eyes fixed sideways and general astonishment at the inclusion of a picture of Nick Barmby testified on Saturday. The Everton team is not. Early days, of course, yet already Moyes’s side are struggling with the weight of expectation and have only themselves to blame for trailing the leading pack once again.

Frustration is settling in on the campaign where under-achievement will be less tolerated. “Two games and only one point is not good enough for us,” Mikel Arteta admitted. “We need to start winning and getting points because there are big teams ahead of us who are winning.”

By contrast Wolves are progressing according to plan. Mick McCarthy spent big this summer in the context of Molineux’s recent history and in comparison with many Premier League peers. He was without two players acquired to push Wolves further away from trouble this season, Steven Fletcher and Stephen Hunt, but that target looked comfortably attainable without them here.

That McCarthy’s team were well-drilled, unyielding and resilient was no surprise to Everton, who dominated first-half possession but lacked the guile or finishing touch to make immediate amends for their opening day defeat at Ewood Park. But they were subdued far too easily by Wolves’ desire to take the game to their hosts after the break.

The introduction of the Algeria international midfielder Adlène Guedioura for George Elokobi, the left-back, gave Karl Henry the added bite required to wrest control of midfield. Indeed the visitors rightly sensed victory once Sylvan Ebanks-Blake converted a fine counterattack to equalise with 15 minutes remaining. Only desperate blocks on Matthew Jarvis by Everton’s central defenders, Sylvain Distin and Phil Jagielka, prevented their second successive 2-1 win.

McCarthy, who blamed himself for Wolves’ first-half retreat, said: “We could have been out of sight in the first half but we defended really well in front of Marcus Hahnemann. Marcus didn’t have much to do but the back four, the midfield and the front two were all bollocksed with all the work they had to do.”

Everton’s performance petered out towards the inevitable boos on the final whistle. Whether injury-plagued, fully fit, complete with new signings or soldiering on without, they have struggled to hit the ground settled or running under Moyes. With Aston Villa and Manchester United to come in the Premier League, they needed another of their belligerent responses to keep this season’s aspirations intact.

The sum total of their dominance in the opening period was a sliced Diniyar Bilyaletdinov shot, a save by Hahnemann from Johnny Heitinga, a close shave from Steven Pienaar and, finally, after the referee Lee Mason somehow failed to award a penalty for a foul by Stephen Ward on Arteta, a scrambled goal from Tim Cahill from the subsequent free-kick. Controversy surrounded both goals, with Wolves appealing for a foul by Cahill on Jody Craddock and Everton likewise when Guedioura caught Heitinga in a 50-50 challenge before Ebanks-Blake levelled.

It was instructive that Moyes refused to give the benefit of the doubt to his players, preferring instead to question Heitinga’s commitment to the tackle and the lazy loss of possession by Louis Saha that demonstrated why he was demoted to the bench in the first place. The Everton manager said: “We were on the attack but we got involved in overdoing it with one-touch passes. We shouldn’t have had to make the tackle but I still would have hoped we’d have come out with the ball.”

The afternoon was uninformative for Fabio Capello, with Phil Jagielka and Leighton Baines subdued and Jack Rodwell strangely left on the bench throughout. In the absence of outstanding homegrown talent it was left to Arteta to admit that, now he is eligible for British citizenship, England is a possibility. “If one day the opportunity comes obviously I would have to consider it very seriously,” said the Spaniard. Not on current form.

Premier LeagueEvertonWolverhampton WanderersAndy Hunterguardian.co.uk

Portsmouth 3-1 Wolverhampton Wanderers | Premier League match report

After his thank you on the Fratton Park pitch to fans for their ceaseless support, Avram Grant’s thoughts turned to Portsmouth’s FA Cup final against Chelsea on 15