Molineux, at 17:30 GMT
I usually get a few comments on social media when I predict a Manchester United defeat, but it's been pretty quiet since I said they would lose to Bournemouth on Sunday.
I didn't think it would be 3-0 again, but the reason I went with the Cherries is because they won at Old Trafford last season, and since then, they have improved while United have declined. So, was this really a surprise?
We turn to this game and the same thinking applies. Why would anyone look at Ruben Amorim's side and support them to beat Wolves? I can't think of any compelling reason why anything would be different here.
I feel sorry for Amorim because he arrived so excited about his appointment, but after only a few weeks, he must be fully aware of the scale of the task he faces to turn things around.
United have wasted a fortune building this team and, as Amorim says, they are still trying to find their best lineup. This is a trial period for him but he has to deal with issues like Marcus Rashford's future as well. He has a lot to sort out.
It's hard to know what the Wolves will be like as well. One of the positives of their win over Leicester in Vitor Pereira's first game was a clean sheet, but you have to remember that the Foxes are a very average team.
So, as poor as United are, I won't be rooting for Wolves to win this one either. Instead, I think this will be a close match and it's a tie all around.
Sutton predictions: 1-1
Eats prediction of everything: I was hoping that winning the derby would boost our level but that was clearly not the case against Bournemouth. Wolves had a good win in Pereira's first game, and playing them in his first home game will be tough, but of course I'll be rooting for us.
I'd like to think that if Rashford or Alejandro Garnacho was on the bench, someone would come in and be motivated to do something, make a difference. 0-2
Eats everything in United's season: I really like Ruben Amorim, I think he's an absolute man. Erik ten Hag was similar when he came in and ruled with an iron fist, but I think communication was his problem. Ten Hag wanted to do it his way when he arrived, and it didn't work, but instead of sticking to his guns he tried to make the system work around the players and not the other way around.
It worked for a while in his first season, until Casemiro's form declined, but the team was never the same after that and Ten Hag never looked very convincing on the touchline. Amorim has really explained things much better, and even if the results aren't great, I think we'll get better.