As Wolves head to London to face West Ham on Sunday evening, VAVEL take a look back at one of Wanderers' finest Premier League wins, which came at Upton Park in March 2010. 

Goals from Kevin Doyle, Ronald Zubar and Matt Jarvis put the game beyond The Hammers, who bagged a consolation in stoppage time through veteran Mexican striker Guillermo Franco

The result put Wolves seven points clear of the bottom three with seven games to go, and proved to be the only time Mick McCarthy's side would score three goals all season.

Wolves start brightest in "massive six pointer"

Just one point and one place separated Wolves and Gianfranco Zola's West Ham at the start of the evening, with McCarthy's side just above The Hammers in 16th place. 

While Wolves had picked up four points from their last two away games at Burnley and Aston Villa, West Ham had lost their last four, leading to Zola calling the game "a massive six pointer".

The start of the game went according to the form book, with Kevin Foley smashing the ball against the bar before namesake Doyle pounced on a James Tomkins error to stroke the ball past Robert Green and give Wolves the lead.

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Wanderers should have been given the chance to double their lead before the break as David Jones was hauled down by Radoslav Kovac inside the area, but referee Phil Dowd was unmoved. 

Goal-shy Wanderers turn on the style

With Zola obviously unimpressed at his team's first half showing, the Chelsea legend withdrew the aforementioned Tomkins and Kovac at the break, replacing them with Jonathan Spector and youngster Junior Stanislas.

West Ham started the half the brighter of the two sides, but the game was put beyond them in three minutes either side of the hour mark. 

Firstly, Ronald Zubar latched onto Jones' through ball to score his first Premier League goal, before Matt Jarvis made it 3-0 less than three minutes later to put Wolves in dreamland. The future England international and West Ham record signing found himself on the end of another Jones pass and fired the ball past Green before wheeling off to celebrate in front of a delirious Wolves end.

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Safety all but guaranteed for McCarthy's men

Franco's late consolation may have wiped away Wolves' clean sheet, but it didn't take anything away from the subsequent celebrations. Wanderers had taken a giant step towards their first ever season of Premier League survival.

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Despite only scoring 25 goals before the crunch tie at Upton Park, Wolves stood seven points clear of the bottom three with just seven games to play, while West Ham were just three points above the dreaded dotted line. 

Wolves would only win one of their remaining games, but four draws against Everton, Stoke, Fulham and Blackburn was enough to ensure safety with two games to go. 

West Ham managed to stop the rot and also survived in 17th place. Despite ensuring a sixth straight season of Premier League football would be enjoyed at Upton Park, Zola was dismissed at the end of the campaign. His replacement, former Chelsea and Portsmouth manager Avram Grant, relegated West Ham in 2010-11.