Wolves conceded late against Burnley in a must-win match for the Old Gold, and in truth there are not many positives to take away.
Several players were disappointing against Burnley, and the early struggles led fans to be disillusioned with the ownership.
Flemming netted a second goal just 15 minutes later to put the away side 2-0 up, and optimism was completely drained from Molineux.
There was some hope provided when Jorgen Strand Larsen tucked away a spot kick, and Marshall Munetsi headed in an equaliser in the final moments of the first half.
However, Burnley’s last-gasp goal ended any hope of three points, and the Clarets are now eight points clear of Wolves.
There are not many who can hold their heads high, but there are quite a few who will come away with their heads in their hands.
Jorgen Strand Larsen is the only winner for Wolves

By all means, it was not the greatest of performances from Jorgen Strand Larsen, but the striker being back among the goals is a small positive to take.
Getting the ball to the Norwegian in good areas still seems to be a big problem, as, besides his first-half penalty, his only other shot was a tame header straight down the middle of the goal.
The forward took the captaincy for this match, with Toti Gomes, Matt Doherty, and Joao Gomes not included in the starting XI.
It would have been a proud moment for the player to guide the Molineux side to a win, but it was not meant to be.
He could perhaps be lucky to be included here, but getting him that first goal in the Premier League is a big win.
Four losers from Wolves 2-3 Burnley
Ki-Jana Hoever
Ki-Jana Hoever was an interesting decision by Vitor Pereira, and he got it very wrong.
The Dutch defender did not impress fans at all, and he did not offer much going forward for the Old Gold.
Jackson Tchatchoua was the obvious man to start in the absence of Matt Doherty, and it is bizarre that Hoever, who had just 23 minutes to his name since the 23rd of August, was trusted in a must-win clash.
He did not repay the faith shown by his manager, and he would be lucky to get another start anytime soon.
Vitor Pereira
The head coach’s time is slowly starting to run out, and the credit he had in the bank is surely spent now.
Wolves simply had to win this game, but yet again some poor decisions in both his team selection and substitutions cost Wolves again.
Things are no doubt about to get toxic for the Portuguese manager, and the ugly scenes at Molineux after the final whistle will not help.

Marshall Munetsi
Marshall Munetsi may have scored, but he was a passenger throughout much of the match.
In fact, a first-half statistic was quite unbelievable when it showed that the midfielder made just two attempts at passing across the first 45.
Across the whole game he made just nine, and only four of those were accurate.
If he had not scored, you would not have known he had played.
Jeff Shi and Fosun
The decision to award Vitor Pereira a new contract is starting to look extremely naive and silly at this point from both Jeff Shi and Fosun.
No wins in nine Premier League games, and Wolves are looking destined for relegation. Terrible decision-making and spending in the summer have let the Old Gold down, and the board have no one to blame but themselves.
They have a big decision to make over the future of the manager over the next few weeks, but fans will have no hope it will be the right one after a string of errors in decision-making.
Discontent among supporters for the board is reaching an all-time high.
