Premier League 25-man squad lists: Wolves leave out Michael Kightly

• 24-year-old has not played since November 2009
• Mick McCarthy ready to send Kightly out on loan

Michael Kightly has been left out of Wolverhampton Wanderers’ 25-man squad for the first half of the season after suffering a setback in his recovery from knee problems.

The 24-year-old winger has not played since November 2009 because of a patella tendon injury and is now likely to go out on loan once he is fit.

The Wolves manager, Mick McCarthy, told the club’s website: “We’re just going to let Kights get on with it. He’s still not quite ready to come back and there’s no pressure on him – it will take as long as it takes. There’s no time limit on it either. When he is fit, he won’t have played since last November and it would be very difficult in that situation to go straight back into the Premier League.

“So, when he is ready, we’ll be able to discuss with him the possibility of going out on loan, which he can do before we have the chance to revise the squad in January.”

Stephen Hunt, who is recovering from foot surgery, has been included along with new recruit Marcus Bent, a loan signing from Birmingham City yesterday. The 32-year-old will be playing for a 14th professional club, and he believes he can still make an impact in the Premier League.

“Once you stop believing in yourself you might as well hang up your boots,” Bent said. “As a footballer, you try and push yourself every day to achieve more and more. I’ll never stop learning. I might be one of the older members of the squad here but I can still get better. I am sure the boys will teach me some stuff and hopefully I can teach them some stuff.”

As well as his named 25, McCarthy will also be able to draw on his development squad, with youngsters Geoffrey Bia Mujangi, Danny Batth, Sam Winnall and Ashley Hemmings all pushing for inclusion.

McCarthy added: “I am delighted with the squad I’ve got at my disposal. Now we’ve got the 25 sorted and we can crack on without any interruptions until January. And there are a lot of lads waiting in the wings who are ready to take their chance if they are called upon.”

Wolves’ 25-man squad

Marcus Hahnemann, Wayne Hennessey, Carl Ikeme, Kevin Foley, Ronald Zubar, Richard Stearman, Jody Craddock, Christophe Berra, Steven Mouyokolo, George Elokobi, Stephen Ward, Jelle Van Damme, Karl Henry, David Jones, Michael Mancienne (on loan from Chelsea), Dave Edwards, Greg Halford, Nenad Milijas, Adlene Guedioura, Matt Jarvis, Stephen Hunt, Kevin Doyle, Steven Fletcher, Sylvan Ebanks-Blake, Marcus Bent (on loan from Birmingham)

Wolverhampton WanderersPremier Leagueguardian.co.uk

Marcus Bent joins Wolves on four-month loan from Birmingham

• Striker signs for City’s local rivals until January
• ‘Marcus will bring Premier League experience’

Birmingham City have allowed Marcus Bent to join their Premier League rivals Wolverhampton Wanderers on a four-month loan deal.

Bent, 32, will boost Wolves’ attacking options following the departure of Andy Keogh to Cardiff City on a season-long deal.

“Marcus is an experienced striker who has played plenty of Premier League football and scored goals,” said the Wolves chief executive Jez Moxey. “People still talk about whether we’ve got enough Premier League experience, and Marcus will add to that.

“He’s also a different type of striker to what we have in that he’s a physical presence. We needed someone after the departure of Andy Keogh and Marcus can do a job for us.”

Bent has fallen down the pecking order at St Andrew’s following the arrivals of Nikola Zigic and Matt Derbyshire.

He spent parts of last season on loan at Middlesbrough and Queens Park Rangers.

Wolverhampton WanderersBirmingham CityTransfer windowguardian.co.uk

Wolverhampton Wanderers 1 Newcastle 1 | Premier League match report

Andy Carroll, who shot Newcastle to promotion, is already proving a handful for Premier League defences and his fourth goal of the season earned Newcastle a deserved point at Molineux, where Wolves emerged from a red-blooded scrap relieved to have extended their unbeaten start to the campaign.

Sylvan Ebanks-Blake, like Carroll, is up and running, his second goal in successive league games earning Wolves their point from a bruising battle littered with a dozen yellow cards. Both these teams would be happy to finish in the 15th place Wolves managed last season and, on this evidence, they will be unlucky to fare any better. That said, significant reinforcement before the transfer window closes could yet change the situation, of course.

Newcastle made the more confident, assertive start, but the best chance of a high tempo, combative opening saw Ebanks-Blake head against the far post, close in, from David Jones’ inswinging corner from the right.

Early on, when the force was with Chris Hughton’s team, they spurned two promising openings. Wayne Routledge rounded Marcus Hahnemann, only for his cross from the byline on the left to defeat Kevin Nolan, who did no better when, set up by Carroll’s knock-down, he sidefooted straight at the goalkeeper at whites-of-the-eyes range.

The busy, bustling Carroll should have given Newcastle the lead after 41 minutes when, put in by Nolan’s short pass, he contrived to shovel his shot over the bar. Such was his frustration that he was booked for one curse too many. It was a bad miss, made all the more capable when Wolves went straight down the other end and scored. Jelle van Damme’s long pass supplied Ebanks-Blake, who outmuscled James Perch and hooked the ball home at it fell from eight yards.

Anxious to atone, Carroll did so after 61 minutes, when he headed in Joey Barton’s long, lofted free-kick from the left, via the near post. Almost immediately, Newcastle would have been ahead but for the reflex save with which Hahnemann repelled Nolan’s volley from near the penalty spot, Routledge having prised Wolves wide open with a run and cross from the right.

But both sides will be reasonably pleased with a point.

Premier LeagueWolverhampton WanderersNewcastle UnitedJoe Lovejoyguardian.co.uk