No happy homecoming for Frank Lampard as Chelsea lose at Wolves

No happy homecoming for Frank Lampard as Chelsea lose at Wolves

A magnificent goal from Matheus Nunes provided a glimmer of hope for Wolves' survival - and also compounded Chelsea's ongoing struggles.

The poor visitors, on their third manager of the season after Graham Potter's sacking last Sunday, turned to Lampard on Thursday in a bid to save their wretched season.

Co-owner Todd Boehly would have expected a reaction - or at the very least to see Chelsea regroup - but he got another limp performance as they remain in the bottom half of the Premier League.

As for Wolves, it was a vital win in their relegation battle which lifted them four points clear of the bottom three to 12th, just a place behind Chelsea. That they did it without suspended talisman and skipper Ruben Neves was further credit and it gives the hosts a platform for survival.

Lampard immediately recalled Conor Gallagher and Raheem Sterling but there was nothing to suggest Chelsea's record goalscorer had sprinkled enough magic to dramatically change their course.

Indeed, Wolves saw plenty of the ball and caused enough problems to keep Kalidou Koulibaly busy. Their issue, as it has been all season, was a lack of cutting edge and Toti Gomes' tame header was the best they could manage.

Yet, the hosts were allowed to build momentum which at least put Chelsea under regular pressure with Wesley Fofana deflecting Mario Lemina's shot wide.

Lampard's men, with the exception of Gallagher, lacked energy with Wolves sensing their chance was coming - and it did in stunning style after 31 minutes.

Nunes has flattered to deceive since his £38million move from Sporting Lisbon last summer but picked a fine time to score his first goal.

Daniel Podence's cross was flicked by Matheus Cunha and then touched on by Koulibaly to fall to Nunes for the midfielder to smash in a wonderful angled half-volley across Kepa Arrizabalaga.

Diego Costa, still waiting for his first Wolves goal, was denied by Kepa soon after as the expensively assembled visitors failed to show much fight. They drifted without a purpose as Lampard's surprise return failed to deliver.

In contrast, Wolves' combative and battle-hardened display was exactly what was required amid the crazy relegation fight which has enveloped half of the league.

They refused to buckle even after Chelsea, who had not come from behind to win when trailing at half time this season, improved after the restart without testing Jose Sa.

It left them open on the break - with Costa and Nunes both wasting chances - but they were at least on top for the first time in the game.

Lampard called for Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang with 22 minutes left but the striker, without a goal since October or a start since November, made little difference.

Time eventually ran out and, excluding youth product Trevoh Chalobah, Lampard introduced £207.5million worth of talent from the bench without success - only underlining Chelsea's disastrous campaign as Wolves held firm.