Tottenham led Brighton 2-1 until the 90th minute last weekend, put up 13 shots and six on target, and lost the draw to a Danso error in stoppage time. They showed a clear understanding of De Zerbi’s vision and looked like a team capable of finally ending their humiliating, 15 match winless run. While Spurs are shockingly now in the relegation zone, they now face a Wolves side that’s scored zero goals in two games, been mathematically relegated, and showed no fight at Leeds. The -139 line is fair. Back Spurs to end the winless run here.
Prediction: Tottenham win
Best Bet: Tottenham Moneyline (-139)
Quick take: Spurs showed genuine quality against Brighton and now face a relegated Wolves side with no fight left. The winless run ends at Molineux.
| Match | Wolverhampton Wanderers vs Tottenham Hotspur |
|---|---|
| Date | April 25, 2026 |
| Venue | Molineux |
| Market Edge | Model gives Spurs ~58% win probability vs implied 55% at -139. Approx. 3-point gap. Thin but directionally correct. |
| xG Comparison (Last 5) | Wolves ~0.9 xG for / 1.64 xGA vs Spurs ~1.12 xG for / 1.38 xGA |
| Best Bet | Tottenham Hotspur Moneyline -139 |

Wolverhampton Wanderers vs Tottenham Hotspur Analysis
- The Sharp Play: Tottenham Moneyline -139
- Confidence Level: 3/5
Spurs had a deserved win snatched from them in stoppage time against Brighton. The xG, shot volume, and performance metrics all backed them, and they now face a relegated side that has scored zero goals and shown zero fight in its last two games. While Spurs may feel the pressure here, they showed a confidence and tactical competence against Brighton that they haven’t displayed all season. They stop the rot at Molineux on Saturday.
Advanced Metrics and Tactical Matchup
Tottenham’s performance against Brighton was more encouraging than the result suggests. They put up 13 shot attempts and 6 on target against a side that presses at one of the highest intensities in the league. Simons produced a goal and an assist and was arguably the best player on the pitch until full time. The issue, as it has been all season, is defensive concentration late in games: Tottenham have now failed to win their last five matches in which they held a lead, losing the lead in the final minutes in multiple cases. That’s a closing-line value problem, not an underlying quality problem.
Wolves under Rob Edwards are sitting in a low-block 3-4-2-1, surrendering possession and looking to break on the counter. That system requires energy and defensive discipline, and both appeared absent against Leeds, where they were 2-0 down inside 20 minutes, offered no real second-half threat, and conceded a penalty for a push in stoppage time.
Their PPDA has drifted as the season has wound down, and in the last two matches they’ve made zero shots that would register as high-quality chances in the npxG model. Against a Tottenham side that moves the ball through Simons and Xavi Simons’ progressive passing lanes, Wolves’ passive shape is actually a gift. It creates exactly the kind of half-space and cutback opportunities De Zerbi’s system is built to exploit.
Team News and Impact Analysis
Cristian Romero (knee) remains out for Tottenham, which is a real defensive loss. Spurs are weakest in the central penalty area (10th percentile in the league for chance quality conceded) and Romero is the main reason that number wasn’t worse. The likely pairing of Dragusin and Micky van de Ven carries risk against aerial strikers, but Wolves’ primary target Tolu Arokodare has had almost no service in recent weeks.
Spurs still have injury issues in the attacking areas, with Kudus (quad) set to miss the trip to Molineux. Lucas Bergvall also picked up a knock against Brighton and is a doubt. However, James Maddison looks set to return after featuring in the matchday squad last weekend, and he may get his first minutes of the season on Saturday.
Without a functioning supply line from midfield, the Romero absence is less impactful than it would in a different fixture. Guglielmo Vicario’s groin issue means he misses out. Antonin Kinsky starts again, meaning that Spurs are working with an adequate but not elite shot-stopper, which partly explains the 1.43 actual goals conceded against a 1.38 xGA baseline.
Wolves are without Johnstone, Mosquera (suspension) and Gonzalez. Krejci came off injured at Leeds and is listed as questionable for Saturday. If he misses out, Wolves lose one of their more effective outlet options. Angel Gomes (foot) is also doubtful, further thinning the creative options behind Arokodare.
Predicted Lineups
Key Betting Stats
- Wolves have scored 0 goals in their last 2 matches, with xG that barely registered in either game. They’ve been confirmed relegated and showed passive body language at Leeds.
- Tottenham led 2-1 vs Brighton until the 90th minute. Six shots on target, 13 total attempts, Simons and Porro both contributed directly to goals. The 2-2 scoreline does not reflect the performance.
- Tottenham have failed to win their last 5 matches in which they held a lead (D3 L2). That’s a late-game focus issue, not an attacking quality issue.
- Tottenham season xG for: 1.12 per game. xGA: 1.38 per game. 42 goals from 41.57 xG, performing to expectation rather than over-relying on variance.
- Wolves xGA per match: 1.64, conceding 1.81 actual goals per game. The gap has been driven by poor goalkeeping earlier in the season.
- Tottenham clean sheet probability: Low (18.9% rate on the season, 7 in 37 games). BTTS is more likely than a Spurs shutout.
- Tottenham have 86 cards this season (2nd most in the league). In a game where they’re likely to chase or protect a lead, Bissouma and Bentancur remain live card props.
- Under 2.5 goals has landed in 53% of Wolves’ matches, but Wolves’ recent passivity and Spurs’ attacking intent from the Brighton game both tilt this toward a goal-rich outcome.
Prop Betting Market
- Xavi Simons Anytime Scorer (+400): Simons scored and assisted against Brighton and was the standout performer on the pitch. He’s hitting form at exactly the right time, and Wolves have struggled to contain midfield runners all season. His goal came from a central cutback lane that Wolves routinely give up. Check current pricing; his output over the last two matches makes this one of the cleaner individual props on the board.
- Both Teams to Score (Yes): Spurs have the attacking quality to score through Simons and Solanke, and Wolves, despite their poor form, have found the net at Molineux against better defensive teams than this Tottenham side. The 18.9% Spurs clean sheet rate argues against banking on a shutout, and Wolves at home have shown enough isolated moments of quality to keep this live.
- Yves Bissouma (+210) or Rodrigo Bentancur (+225) Card: Tottenham have accumulated 86 cards this season (2nd in the league). Bissouma’s pressing aggression and Bentancur’s ground-level tenacity both spike in high-stakes away games. The disciplinary profile makes this one of the better prop angles regardless of the result.
Final Betting Model Projection
| Metric | Projection | Market | Edge |
| Win Prob. | 58.2% (Spurs) | 55.1% (-139) | +3.1% |
| Expected Goals | Wolves 0.82 – 1.74 Spurs | O/U 2.5 | Lean Over |
| Top Value Play | Spurs ML | -139 | Moderate |
The market is slightly underweighting the situational edge here. Tottenham’s Brighton performance was legitimately good. The xG backed them, the shot volume backed them, and only a freak individual error cost them the win. They now face a Wolves side playing out the season with nothing to prove, no fight in recent performances, and personnel issues that make their low-block system increasingly hard to staff.
The -139 line is a fair price given Tottenham’s injury issues, but the direction is right. Spurs win, likely by a single goal, and finally end the winless run.
FAQs
Tottenham Hotspur at -139, with Wolves at +333 and the draw at +311.
Tottenham generate more per game (1.12 vs 0.90 for Wolves) and concede at a better rate (1.38 xGA vs 1.64). The underlying numbers favor Spurs, and Wolves’ last two games showed near-zero attacking output.
Tottenham moneyline at -139. The narrative around their 15-game winless run overstates the quality gap between these sides right now, and a motivated Spurs against a disinterested relegated Wolves is closer to a 58-to-42 proposition than the current line implies.
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