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Wolves Sunderland 1-1 Draw After Ballard Red Card Dampens Sunderland European Quest
Sanjeev Kumar | May 3, 2026 1:23 AM CST

Sunderland dropped valuable points in the race for European qualification, drawing 1-1 against bottom side Wolves despite leading early and then playing with 10 players.
The result at Molineux leaves Sunderland stuck in mid-table and risks widening the gap to sixth place by the end of the Premier League weekend. The visitors had a chance to climb into the top half and close the distance to the European spots to just one point. Instead, Regis Le Bris saw Sunderland take only a single point from a game that briefly looked under control, stretching a poor run to one point from three league matches. The key moment arrived midway through the first half when Sunderland were already ahead. Dan Ballard tangled with Tolu Arokodare while challenging for the ball, and officials judged that Ballard pulled Arokodare's hair. After VAR recommended an on-field review, referee Paul Tierney checked the monitor and then produced a red card. Ballard's dismissal came in the 24th minute, at a time when Sunderland still led 1-0. That timing carried statistical significance, as it was the earliest Premier League sending-off for a player whose team was ahead since May 2021, when Joao Cancelo was sent off after 10 minutes for Manchester City against Brighton. Sunderland had started sharply and moved in front through a set-piece routine. In the 17th minute, Granit Xhaka swung in a corner from the left and Nordi Mukiele met it with a firm header that beat goalkeeper Dan Bentley. The goal settled Sunderland, but the advantage lasted only until the red card shifted momentum. Wolves adjusted more effectively after the break, especially once Rob Edwards altered the defensive shape. Edwards moved from a back three to a back four for the second half. The change quickly brought reward, as Santiago Bueno rose highest to head in an equaliser within nine minutes of the restart. Wolves vs Sunderland Premier League: Missed chances and key saves With an extra player, Wolves pushed forward repeatedly and created pressure on the Sunderland defence. Robin Roefs produced several important stops, denying Matheus Mane and later Adam Armstrong as Wolves searched for a second goal. Those interventions kept Sunderland level despite long spells pinned inside their own half. As Wolves committed players forward, space opened for Sunderland on the counter-attack. Substitute Wilson Isidor almost exploited that in the closing stages when Roefs launched a long pass upfield. Isidor failed to control cleanly, though, wasting what could have become a clear one-on-one chance against Bentley in the final 10 minutes. The warning from Isidor's break briefly checked Wolves' aggression, but they still created one final opportunity. Arokodare found room in the penalty area in added time and met a cross with a knee rather than a foot. The effort flew over the bar, and with it went Wolves' best late chance to secure victory.
 
Wolves vs Sunderland Premier League: Data debrief and key statistics Wolves' numerical advantage showed clearly in the attacking data, with the hosts posting their highest shot count of this Premier League season. They attempted 20 efforts on goal, and seven of those were on target. Wolves have only once produced more shots on target this campaign, registering eight against West Ham in January.
Team Total shots Shots on target Red cards
Wolves 20 7 0
Sunderland Fewer than Wolves Fewer than Wolves 1 (Dan Ballard, 24')
Historical comparison underlined how much the dismissal changed Sunderland's outlook. Manchester City lost that 2021 match against Brighton 3-2 after Cancelo's early red card, and Sunderland at least avoided defeat here. However, drawing against the division's bottom team leaves continental ambitions fading, with the gap to sixth potentially stretching to five points.


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