Wolverhampton Wanderers have moved above AFC Bournemouth into seventh in the Premier League after a clinical performance from the hosts.
Raul Jiminez's fifth goal of the season broke the deadlock for Wolves, before Ivan Cavaleiro doubled their advantage late on.
Wolves' third successive victory in the Premier League ensured they move above the Cherries into seventh place in the table.
How It Happened
Bournemouth full-back Charlie Daniels effectively handed Wolves the opening goal with his error being capitalised on by Diogo Jota, whose shot was deflected to Jiminez, who finished.
Jota picked up an injury and was replaced at half-time by winger Helder Costa - who had a golden opportunity to double Wolves' advantage but he fired wide of Asmir Begovic's goal.
Junior Stanislas came extremely close for Bournemouth, when his free-kick rattled the crossbar for the away side.
Bournemouth were dominating, possession and territory-wise, but they just couldn't break down a tough Wolves defence.
With the Cherries throwing everything they had in stoppage-time, Wolves made the most of the space and substitute Cavaleiro calmly wrapped up the scoring.
Bournemouth now have just the one win from their last seven league matches and have now slipped to 10th.
Wolves are now one point behind Manchester United in sixth-place, as they continue to impress in the Premier League.
The Managers
Wolves head coach Nuno Espirito Santo has admitted he has much "pride" in his team after Saturday's victory.
"In this weather, with the wind, cold and rain and against Bournemouth - I'm very proud. We did a fantastic job," Espirito Santo said.
"Before we were in a bad moment. Now we're in a good moment. It's important to realise why. The boys' character, the way they commit to the work on a daily basis, well done to them.
"It was hard for every player on the pitch. Both teams matched each other. The main thing today was staying compact and robust. I'm very proud of the work we do every day and the character the boys showed."
Bournemouth boss Eddie Howe has blamed today's loss on the lack of "killer-instinct" in front of goal.
"We dominated the ball today and made two big mistakes for the goals," Howe said. "Wolves are very good at soaking pressure and hitting on the counter. It was a frustrating afternoon.
"A lot of our build-up play was very good but the killer-instinct wasn't. We didn't create many real clear-cut chances. We've got to be very strong, show big character and come through this.
"Confidence is such a delicate thing. You cannot overestimate the importance of losing key individuals, but that is no excuse, that's what you have a squad for."