26-01-2024, 18:34
(This post was last modified: 27-01-2024, 00:00 by Ska'dForLife-WBA.)
Infuriatingly, a detailed thread I was ready to put up for this match went up in smoke when my laptop crashed mid-post, so it's a lightweight effort done from memory as the FA Cup brings the third Black Country derby of the decade to our doorstep on Sunday morning, delighting vendors of pork scratchings, mild ale and blood-pressure pharmaceuticals everywhere. It's been precisely seventeen years since the last cup tie between the sides - our legendary 3-0 fourth-round win at Molineux was on the same date in 2007 - and you have to go back to February 1949 for the last time the derby was contested with the teams in different divisions (then, as now, Wolves a league above us), so before a ball's even kicked, it's one for the history books.
So much depends on the team selections, and it would be immensely disappointing to see either manager field a weakened XI for such a huge occasion (though Albion are necessarily without Ajayi and Diangana, both at the African Cup of Nations). On paper Wolves are clear favourites on league position alone, together with their current six-match unbeaten streak; nevertheless, we know Albion are strong on home soil this season, are defending the 28-year unbeaten home record against Wolves and have the unpredictability of derby and cup together on our side.
So it's the underdog role for us, and realistically, if we can keep a lid on Pedro Neto and take a draw that keeps honour intact that'll be an excellent result in the circumstances, whatever happens in the subsequent replay. But if the big-money firepower of Wolves prevails on Sunday, so be it; it's not the end of the season or the world. Turn in a good showing and make a game of it, and we can hold our heads high.
"I would rather spend a holiday in Tuscany than in the Black Country, but if I were compelled to choose between living in West Bromwich or Florence, I should make straight for West Bromwich." - J.B. Priestley