Jack Grealish:
You could see in Grealish's face just how much his goal meant to him as he slid in front of the City fans following his 55-second strike.
Pep Guardiola may be happy with his contribution, but criticism has been growing and the England forward has said he wants more goals and assists.
After 125 days without a Premier League goal, there was sheer joy in his opener and coming so early in the game, it allowed him to settle quickly and there were some familiar flicks and dynamic runs of old.
Wolves fans weren't happy with him, particularly for his involvement in Nathan Collins' red card - more on that later - but Grealish knows that when he's getting booed, he's doing something right.
Erling Haaland:
It wouldn't be a City winners' column without a mention of the striker, who got his inevitable goal to become the the first player in Premier League history to score in his first four away games.
One of the benefits of being such a predator is that defenders are terrified when he's involved anywhere near the goal.
Certainly Max Kilman didn't know where to turn when Haaland picked up the ball 30 yards out, backing off and losing sight of the ball and allowing him to fire in a low, bobbling strike.
It wasn't quite as aesthetically pleasing as his acrobatics in midweek, but it's now 14 goals in 10 matches, seven successive games with a goal and 100 in his last 99 matches.
Kevin De Bruyne:
No player has scored more Premier League goals at Molineux in 2022 than De Bruyne, but he was back in assists mode here.
De Bruyne was utterly unstoppable at the end of last season when he scored four goals in a 5-1 victory when the title pressure was on.
Back to provider, he took less than a minute to steer in a trademark cross that this time eluded Haaland but was steered in by Grealish.
His second was another perfect cross for Foden, and with an industrious performance throughout, he remains City's most important player.