Do We Want to Be Remembered for Fighting or Being Cowards? The Question Haunting Wolves’ Historic Collapse
The air at Molineux is thick with a silence that speaks volumes. It’s not the quiet of anticipation, but the hollow, echoing quiet of a season, and perhaps an identity, crumbling into dust. Wolverhampton Wanderers, a club with a proud history and a recent era of European adventures, are not just losing. They are in a state of freefall, a statistical and spiritual descent that has shifted the conversation from survival to infamy. In the eye of this storm, a single, searing question has been posed, cutting through the tactical failures and missed tackles to the very heart of professional pride. Veteran defender Matt Doherty, with the club’s fate all but sealed, laid it bare for his teammates: “Do we want to be remembered for fighting until the end of the season or do we want to be remembered for being cowards?” The answer, in these final agonizing weeks, will define their legacy far beyond a single relegation.
A Descent into Unwanted History
Relegation from the Premier League is a painful but familiar tale for many clubs. What is unfolding at Wolves, however, threatens to transcend mere failure and enter the realm of legendary ignominy. The numbers are not just bad; they are historically bleak. Their last victory was a distant memory in April against Leicester. Since then, a soul-destroying run of 10 consecutive defeats has been part of a broader collapse of 15 losses in 17 games. The team is not just being beaten; it is being systematically dismantled, often appearing devoid of belief, structure, or fight.
This catastrophic form has now set a chilling target in the crosshairs: Derby County’s infamous record low points total of 11, set in the 2007-08 season. With Wolves stranded on a paltry sum, the arithmetic of shame is simple. The record low points total of 11 is under serious, palpable threat. Every passing match without a point edges them closer to becoming the new standard-bearers for top-flight futility. This is the stark reality—they are not just fighting to avoid the Championship, but fighting to avoid being etched into history as the worst team the Premier League has ever seen.
Doherty’s Gauntlet: A Challenge of Character
In such moments, clichéd rallying cries about “taking each game as it comes” ring hollow. Matt Doherty’s public challenge was remarkable for its raw, unfiltered honesty. It bypassed the usual manager-speak and went straight to the core of professional sport: legacy and self-respect. By invoking the words “fighting or being cowards,” Doherty did several things:
- Made Accountability Public: He removed the safety net of private dressing room talks, placing the squad’s character under public scrutiny.
- Framed the Finale: He correctly identified that the remaining matches are not about salvation, but about testimony. They are a living CV for every player and staff member involved.
- Appealed to Pride: Beyond contracts and future transfers, he appealed to the basic athletic pride that should prevent any professional from simply surrendering.
This is a question that resonates far beyond football. It’s about how one faces inevitable, public failure. Do you go down swinging, with a semblance of honor, or do you capitulate, allowing the narrative to be one of pure cowardice? For a squad containing experienced internationals, the answer should be a given. Yet, their performances suggest the question needed to be asked, which is perhaps the most damning indictment of all.
Anatomy of a Collapse: More Than Just Bad Form
To attribute this collapse solely to a lack of fight would be an oversimplification, though it is the most visible symptom. The roots run deeper, creating a perfect storm of dysfunction. The 15th loss in 17 games is not a coincidence; it is a pattern born from systemic issues.
Managerial Instability: The prolonged, messy search for a permanent manager after Bruno Lage created a vacuum of leadership and philosophy. While Julen Lopetegui finally arrived, the foundational instability had already taken its toll.
Recruitment & Squad Morale: A perceived lack of investment in the first-team squad, contrasted with high-profile sales, sent a demoralizing message. The squad has looked thin, unbalanced, and at times, patched together.
The Psychological Spiral: Once a run of defeats gains momentum, it creates a powerful negative psychology. Mistakes are anticipated, confidence evaporates, and every setback feels pre-ordained. Breaking this cycle requires immense mental strength—the very quality Doherty is questioning.
The interplay of these factors has created an environment where fighting spirit has been suffocated. The challenge now is to rediscover it in the most trying of circumstances, with the world watching and history books poised.
Predictions and Legacy: What Happens Next?
The final chapter of Wolves’ Premier League season is yet to be written, but the plot is largely determined. Relegation is a mathematical near-certainty. The compelling drama now lies in whether they can answer Doherty’s call.
The Best-Case Scenario: The squad uses the public challenge as a catalyst. They find a performance of grit and passion, perhaps snatching a draw or even a shock win against a complacent opponent. They show enough spine to avoid the Derby record, finishing with 12 or 13 points. They are remembered as a bad team that, at the last, showed heart.
The Worst-Case Scenario: The slide continues unabated. They become the new worst team in top flight history, failing to reach Derby’s 11-point mark. The “cowards” label becomes an inescapable part of the club’s story, a millstone for every player who wore the shirt this season. This legacy could haunt the club’s ability to attract players and rebound in the Championship.
The Likely Outcome: Somewhere in between. Expect a slight, pride-induced uptick in effort, but the fundamental flaws may prevent any tangible reward. The fight to avoid the record will go to the wire, a sad but fitting final battle for a season defined by struggle.
Conclusion: More Than a Record, It’s About Respect
Matt Doherty’s question—“fighting or being cowards?”—will hang over Molineux long after the final whistle of this dismal campaign. The points record is a tangible, statistical fate, but the question addresses something more profound: the intangible residue of a season. How a team, and the individuals within it, conduct themselves in the face of abject failure says more about them than any trophy ever could.
For Wolves, the fight is no longer for Premier League status. That battle is lost. The fight now is for self-respect, for professional dignity, and for ensuring that when the history of this catastrophic season is written, it contains a footnote of defiance, not just a chapter of cowardice. The world is watching to see if they have the character to choose the former. Their place in history, for all the wrong reasons, depends on it.
Source: Based on news from BBC Sport.
