Fixture summary
Wolves only have three fixtures left, but the run does improve after a tough immediate test. They travel to Brighton in GW36, rated FDR 4, then host Fulham in GW37, FDR 3, before finishing away at Burnley in GW38, FDR 2. That gives them an average FDR of 3.0 across the final three gameweeks.
The split is two away matches and one home match, which slightly dampens confidence for defensive picks. Brighton away is clearly the standout problem fixture, while Burnley away on the final day is the best attacking spot in the run. Fulham at home sits in the middle, good enough to consider Wolves assets, but not strong enough to aggressively buy multiple pieces unless you need a budget enabler.
In simple terms, this is a mixed schedule with one difficult fixture, one decent fixture and one strong fixture. The easy stretch is really GW37 to GW38 rather than the whole run.
FPL implications by position
Defensively, Wolves are more in the rotation or bench category than the must-own tier. The best budget names are S.Bueno at £4.4m, with 87 points and 3.8 form, and H.Bueno at £4.3m, with 81 points and 2.0 form. S.Bueno stands out as the better current value play based on form, and he is the clearest route into the defence if you want a cheap starter for GW37 and GW38.
Krejčí, priced at £4.5m, has only 60 points and a very weak 0.2 form, so he is difficult to recommend unless your squad value structure specifically needs him. In goal, José Sá at £4.2m has 59 points and 0.8 form. That profile does not justify a goalkeeper transfer, especially with Brighton first up and limited clean sheet confidence overall.
In midfield, Wolves offer budget playable options rather than explosive targets. J.Gomes is the top scorer listed with 101 points at £5.3m, though his 2.2 form suggests modest recent output. André is close behind at £5.2m, with 88 points and 2.8 form. Neither profile screams captaincy or even weekly lock status, but both are viable as fifth-midfield enablers if you want someone who can be started in GW37 and GW38.
Up front, the appeal is low. Tolu at £5.2m has 63 points and just 1.0 form. Mané at £4.2m has 59 points and 1.5 form. Those numbers make both forwards look like low-upside punts rather than serious transfer targets. If you are shopping in this price bracket, Wolves do not offer enough recent attacking momentum to prioritise them.
Buy / hold / sell windows
Buy: The best buying window is from GW37 onward. Fulham at home and Burnley away is the part of the run where a Wolves defender or budget midfielder can realistically return value. S.Bueno is the standout short-term buy among defenders, while J.Gomes or André can be considered if you need a cheap midfield starter.
Hold: Existing owners should generally hold through the final three unless they have luxury transfers. Bench Wolves assets in GW36 if your squad allows, then reassess for Fulham and Burnley. This is especially true for S.Bueno and J.Gomes, who have the strongest blend of price and points.
Sell: If you are holding José Sá, Krejčí, Tolu or Mané, there is no strong case to keep them unless you are completely blocked by other fires. Their combination of low form, limited ceiling and a tricky GW36 fixture makes them easy sells.
Verdict
Wolves are not a team to aggressively target, but they are not a full avoid either. The schedule averages FDR 3.0, and the final two matches are clearly more useful than the first. That points to a wait or selective hold approach rather than a major buying spree.
If you want one asset, S.Bueno is the best value pick at £4.4m with 87 points and 3.8 form. In midfield, J.Gomes and André are acceptable budget options, but not priorities. Up front and in goal, the numbers are too weak to justify investment.
Verdict: own only as budget depth, hold if you already have the right pieces, and wait until GW37 if buying fresh.