O'Neil 'has lost the dressing room'
We asked you to send in your questions for Fara Williams and the former England midfielder and BBC Sport pundit has been answering a selection.
Tim asked: What is the impact on a club of having the captain traded away in three consecutive summers?
Losing your captain can have a big impact on players. They are a leader who you have leaned on through good and bad times.
Wolves are a yo-yo team. They can go on a run of really good results and then a run where they pick up no points at all. Your captain is the person you go to and the connection between the manager and team-mates.
Centre-half is the defensive position Wolves have mostly lost their captain in recent years - Max Kilman the latest - and that is a crucial place on the pitch in terms of leadership, communication and responsibility.
So it is not just losing the captains but also the position of those captains that is very difficult for the club.
That spine of the team, that leader, is huge for the players.
Mark asked: How long should Gary O'Neil be given to turn things around?
There have been so many transitions at Wolves with players and managers. It is a difficult group but, ultimately, football is a results-based business.
We saw last season that they did really well under O'Neil, but I think he has lost the dressing room.
You can see it in the body language of the players. As a former player myself, you can read into it and see when the players are not believing in what they are doing.
They are not following the tactical gameplan but rather going off and doing their own thing.
It feel like Wolves have lost their identity as a club.
When you sign for a team, what does it mean to you to play for them? They have lost their identity a bit there - and do not have very many homegrown players coming through either.
With the results as they are, I do not think O'Neil will be given that much more time.
When you lose the dressing room, your job ultimately goes with it.
Fara Williams was speaking to BBC Sport's Nicola Pearson