Postpublished at 10 mins
Tottenham 0-0 Wolves
Just wide!
Goncalo Guedes is given so much room to run into by the Spurs defence, but after opening up to shoot he drags his effort wide of the post.
FT: Bournemouth 0-3 Arsenal - Odegaard double before Saliba stunner, radio and text
FT: Everton 1-1 Nottingham Forest - Johnson with opener but Gray levels (listen to BBC Radio 5 Live commentary)
FT: Fulham 3-2 Brentford - De Cordova-Reid & Palinha for hosts but Norgaard pulls one back & Toney levels, before Mitrovic header
FT: Crystal Palace 3-1 Aston Villa - Watkins with opener but Zaha scores double & Mateta adds third
FT: Leicester 1-2 Southampton - Maddison with curling free-kick but Adams scores double
Shamoon Hafez
Tottenham 0-0 Wolves
Just wide!
Goncalo Guedes is given so much room to run into by the Spurs defence, but after opening up to shoot he drags his effort wide of the post.
Tottenham 0-0 Wolves
That's dire.
Son Heung-min takes the free-kick but whips it straight into the side-netting. Was he going for goal? Guess so.
Tottenham 0-0 Wolves
This is clumsy.
Nathan Collins fouls Son Heung-min on the left side, just outside Wolves' box. This is going into the mixer.
Tottenham 0-0 Wolves
Will anyone ever score a volley straight from a corner from the edge of the box and it not make you think of Paul Scholes?
Tottenham 0-0 Wolves
John Southall
BBC Radio 5 Live
Slow start to the game, both teams feeling each other out. Wolves has a very good record against Tottenham playing away from home so they should be fairly confident. Shouldn't be any problem with communication because their midfield three and front three are all from Portugal.
Tottenham 0-0 Wolves
Ruben Neves only scores good goals.
He absolutely belts a volleyed effort on target from outside the box after being picked out by a corner. It is well hit and on target but straight into Hugo Lloris' bread basket.
Tottenham 0-0 Wolves
That's nice.
Wolves do well to open Spurs up as Joao Moutinho flicks a ball through for Goncalo Guedes. Over comes Davinson Sanchez, though, to block the resulting shot.
Tottenham 0-0 Wolves
Again, Spurs look for that big ball from the back. Eric Dier gets it all wrong, though, clubbing it out of play. Foot like a traction engine, but not in a good way.
Tottenham 0-0 Wolves
First sniff of an opening for Harry Kane, who is picked out by a lofted ball over the top. he gets his toe to the ball but the touch is heavy and the ball dribbles out of play ahead of him.
Tottenham 0-0 Wolves
Wolves make the first inroads down the right as Pedro Neto darts to the byline to send over a low cross that is hacked away.
Tottenham 0-0 Wolves
It's sunny, but not red hot. The pitch is in grand nick. You're not going to get a better set of conditions for a game of football.
Tottenham 0-0 Wolves
Tottenham have an early chance to take top spot in the Premier League.
Wolves have some new faces and are looking for their first win of the campaign.
We are under way...
Tottenham v Wolves (12:30 BST)
Tottenham v Wolves (12:30 BST)
Here come the teams. You ready for some actual football?
Of course you are.
Tottenham v Wolves (12:30 BST)
It's the third week of Chris Sutton predicting the Premier League results and he is hoping to earn his first win against Bad Boy Chiller Crew's GK after losses to Alistair Bruce-Ball and Serge Pizzorno.
Sutton's prediction: 3-1
I was a bit disappointed with Tottenham's performance against Chelsea last weekend.
Spurs showed good character to come back and get a draw, but that result was more to do with poor refereeing decisions and luck as far as I could see.
Wolves have signed Portugal forward Goncalo Guedes from Valencia to try to increase their goal threat, but he couldn't make much difference when he came on against Fulham last week.
Bruno Lage's side's biggest issue last year was they didn't score enough goals, despite having some very talented players.
Tottenham clearly don't have that problem. It will be interesting to see if Antonio Conte starts with Richarlison this time, but either way they will have too much firepower for Wolves to handle.
GK's prediction: 2-0
Find out how GK and Sutton think the rest of the weekend's fixtures will go and vote here
Tottenham v Wolves (12:30 BST)
It could be a record-breaking day for Harry Kane today.
The England captain has already equalled the Premier League record for most goals scored for a single club: hitting 184 for Spurs, which is equal to the total scored by Sergio Aguero for Manchester City.
Tottenham v Wolves (12:30 BST)
Dazzling Dave, Always Wolves Fan TV, external
Some may think that Wolves are minnows compared to Tottenham with their stadium and all the trappings of a 'top six club' but we played an important part in making football the game it is today.
Wolves were founder members of the English Football League back before the existence of Spurs and have won the top division three times to be champions of England. We have won 17 major trophies including four FA Cups and two League Cups.
Our heyday was undoubtedly the 1950s. In 1953-54 Wolves played a number of floodlit friendlies against top European sides. Most famously Wolves beat Honved, whose team largely consisted of the Hungarian national side who had just beaten England twice. This result meant Wolves were proclaimed 'champions of the world' - a title never bestowed on Spurs.
This series of European friendly matches was the catalyst for the formation of the European Cup, now known as the Champions League, so all things considered, the football world has big reasons to thank Wolves.
Wolves are the only team to have won all four divisions in the football league. They're back on the up and are now ranked in the top 20 of the world's biggest football brands. However, I think it best not to compare Spurs and Wolves and just consider them two big teams. But Wolves will always be the biggest in my eyes.
Tottenham v Wolves (12:30 BST)
Anna Howells, Spurs XY, external
Wolves were one of the founding members of the Football League and won the league three times in the 1950s with manger Stan Cullis.
Then, in the 1960s, it was Spurs under Bill Nicholson who took the limelight. So, some historical similarities.
Later, there were a couple of memorable meetings. Spurs won the inaugural Uefa Cup final in 1972 with Martin Chivers' two goals at Molineux, and Alan Mullery's ultimately decisive effort at White Hart Lane.
Then there was the 1981 FA Cup semi-final with a late penalty wrongly awarded to Wolves for a tackle by Glenn Hoddle. The tackle was outside the penalty area and Hoddle won the ball cleanly. Spurs won the replay held just down the road [at Highbury], taking us (and Ossie) to the Wembley final.
Wolves, meanwhile, suffered with ownership changes and receiverships, and dropped into the Fourth Division in 1986. To their credit they have recovered on and off the field and, since 2018, have been back in the Premier League, where I am sure their fans feel they belong.
Overall, both clubs have proud histories but I think, currently, given our Champions League final exploits, stadium and more, it is tough to consider Wolves quite as big as Spurs.
This week, Manchester United were linked with a move for Jamie Vardy. Today, the 35-year-old striker signed a new deal at Leicester to keep him at the club until 2024.
Do you think he might have used the reported United interest as a bit of leverage? I certainly would have.
Vardy marked 10 years at the club in May and has scored 133 Premier League goals in 272 appearances.
He scored 24 goals in 2015-16 as they won the Premier League title and he has also won the FA Cup and played in the Champions League since joining from non-league Fleetwood in 2012.
Every other deal this week has been dwarfed by Manchester United's move for Real Madrid midfielder Casemiro.
United have reached an agreement to sign the 30-year-old Brazil midfielder, who has won three La Liga titles and five Champions Leagues with Real, in a deal worth up to £70m.
The fee is an initial £60m plus £10m in add-ons and Casemiro will sign a four-year deal with the option of one more.
So is he the answer to all United's woes or yet further evidence of how all over the shop the strategy is at Old Trafford.