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Angel Gomes has won four England caps since 2024 Wolves have sealed the signings of England midfielder Angel Gomes from Marseille and striker Adam Armstrong from Southampton. Gomes joins on loan until the end of the season, with Wolves having an option to buy for about £6m. Striker Armstrong moves for an initial £7m on a three-and-a-half-year contract after the £48m sale of striker Jorgen Strand Larsen to Crystal Palace also went through on deadline day. Wolves are bottom of the Premier League, 18 points from safety, and planning for an expected relegation to the Championship. Boss Rob Edwards said: "He [Gomes] and I have been speaking for the last few weeks. I explained what we wanted to do and that we would love to have him here and how he can help us. "He's really excited to get playing in England, and it's really exciting for us to have someone who's hungry to be here and wants to show everyone how good is. "He's got bags of quality, so I'm looking forward to seeing him integrate into the group. " Gomes started his career at Manchester United and made 10 appearances before joining Lille in 2020, playing 126 times and scoring 10 goals. He joined Marseille last summer and has scored four goals in 19 games, leaving Roberto de Zerbi's side third in Ligue 1. He made his England debut against Ireland in 2024 and has four caps. Adam Armstrong started his career at Newcastle before joining Blackburn in 2018 Palace sign Strand Larsen in deal worth up to £48m but Mc Neil loan off Armstrong has spent four and a half years at Southampton, where he scored 43 goals in 174 games, following a move from Blackburn Rovers in 2021. He has 11 goals in 32 games for Saints this term, and started his career at hometown club Newcastle United, with a loan spell at Wolves' rivals West Bromwich Albion last season. "Adam's really excited to be here. He's a competitor and he's got something about him that we need now, " added Edwards. "He was really keen to come and join Wolves, and wants to play for Wolves, so it's a really good day for the club getting him in. "He's someone I've admired for a long, long time. He's a really good footballer, a goal threat and a goalscorer. He's someone who can play off the sides if we wanted him to, he'll see himself as a nine and as a goalscorer, but he's more than that. " Comments can not be loaded To load Comments you need to enable Java Script in your browser 'Strong and smart' - have Liverpool signed 'next Van Dijk' in Jacquet? Two club-record signings - but are Palace papering over the cracks? Just seven signings - the Premier League's quiet deadline day Kendrick Lamar: The artist who has reshaped modern hip-hop A high stakes, globetrotting cat-and-mouse game Could Heated Rivalry positively influence ice hockey? Lewis Moody opens up about his MND diagnosis Just seven signings - the Premier League's quiet deadline day 'Strong and smart' - have Liverpool signed 'next Van Dijk' in Jacquet? All the done deals on deadline day in one place Will Seahawks stop Patriots' record bid? Lowdown on Super Bowl 2026 Two club-record signings - but are Palace papering over the cracks? Six Nations preview & BBC pundit predictions 'Pure genius' - who has made Troy's Premier League team of the week? 'Complacent and lost control' - Man City's second-half problem Why I loved a deadline-day deal - and never saw them as a risk 'If Arsenal don't win title now the blame will be entirely their own' Happy tennis, serious name - how history-maker Alcaraz clinched career Slam What's gone wrong for Chelsea in WSL and is Bompastor still right coach? Why 2026 could be GB's most successful Winter Olympics The most powerful woman in football - meet game's first female super agent I never stopped believing - Calvert-Lewin Your Winter Olympics need-to-know guide in six charts Nine siblings and a dog called Zoomer - Wirtz in his own words Barcelona 'shakedown' offers first hints of F1 2026 The NFL's 'Queen's Gambit' who helped create $1. 5bn worth of talent Record-breaking World Cup, so why no title sponsor for domestic league? Copyright © 2026 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.