Wolves deservedly secured a 1-0 derby triumph over Birmingham which could have been all the more comfortable if not for the heroics of Ben Foster.
Stephen Hunt's near-post finish on the stroke of half-time was the only effort to beat the England international who put in another sublime performance to keep the hosts at bay at Molineux.
Wanderers triumphed with their first clean sheet since April, although that was much to do with Birmingham's inability to create anything of note.
Wolves boss Mick McCarthy stoked the flames ahead of the derby by stressing the encounter was about more than just three points, and he will be a relieved man to see his side move within a point of safety with what was his first success over the blue half of Birmingham in seven league attempts.
McCarthy was admittedly dealing with the most severe injury crisis he has had to contend with in almost two decades of management.
With enough players sidelined to make an entire starting XI, he was forced to make four changes from the side who went down 3-0 at Blackburn last weekend - Kevin Doyle (dead leg), Matt Jarvis, Michael Mancienne (both knee) and Steven Mouyokolo (back) making way for Sylvan Ebanks-Blake, Hunt, David Edwards and Richard Stearman.
Birmingham counterpart Alex McLeish also made three changes, handing starts to Serbia striker Nikola Zigic, Sebastian Larsson and David Murphy.
The opening stages were played at a typical bustling derby tempo, setting the trend for the afternoon.
Foster's first save of the encounter came with 10 minutes on the clock, diving to his right to pluck Edwards' goalbound header out of the air.
The former Manchester United stopper was at it again less than 60 seconds later, denying Hunt with a great point-blank block after the ball broke six yards out.
Blues were losing possession far too easily in the final third, meaning they were struggling to create a worthwhile chance.
Foster was made to work again just before the half-hour mark, getting down low to save Ebanks-Blake's shot on the turn from the edge of the area.
Wolves, despite their injury crisis, were definitely looking the most likely to break the deadlock.
Stephen Ward lobbed a speculative effort over the crossbar before Ebanks-Blake was again left cursing the form of Foster as he parried his drilled effort at the near post.
Ward did find the net just before the interval but he was rightfully flagged offside.
Yet there was nothing wrong with Hunt's 45th-minute breakthrough as he got in between Roger Johnson and Stephen Carr to connect with Ebanks-Blake's low cross, leaving Foster with no chance.
The lively Edwards should have doubled Wolves' advantage within minutes of the restart, somehow planting his unmarked header inches wide from Ward's right-wing cross.
The momentum from the first half had failed to shift and Foster was again called into action, getting his body behind Nenad Milijas' free-kick before collecting Ronald Zubar's tame shot.
Christophe Berra headed over from Hunt's corner as McCarthy's side looked for a killer second.
Birmingham were in desperate need of some fresh impetus and McLeish turned to Craig Gardner and Jean Beausejour from the bench.
But it was Foster who continued to be the visitors' key performer as he produced his umpteenth save of the match to tip Milijas' header over the bar.
Berra collided with a post as he tried to head home, but Wolves were unable to build on their one-goal advantage with 20 minutes remaining.
Ward's dangerous cross was well held by Foster before McLeish threw his last roll of the dice, bringing on former West Brom man Kevin Phillips to boos from the Molineux faithful.
Despite the home side's dominance they nearly threw the points away as the game entered the final 15 minutes but Cameron Jerome was unable to connect with Beausejour's left-wing cross when, if he had, he surely would have scored.
Phillips, who has a wonderful record in derbies, had an even better chance in the 89th minute but got his angles all wrong and headed off target, much to the relief of the majority of the 25,150 present.
After the match Mick McCarthy claimed Wolves' dominant derby triumph signalled the team spirit within his struggling side as they battle to climb out of the drop zone.
"I'm pleased, of course I am," said McCarthy. "We've come away with a 1-0 victory but Wayne (Hennessey) has not made any saves of note to be fair. It was an all-round good performance. I'm delighted with our team's performance, we played well."
He explained: "People keep asking me about team spirit and morale and I keep saying 'It's good'. I'm not sure people believe me but I think performances like that speak volumes for it."
Victory was massive for Wolves who kept their first clean sheet since April, and that was highlighted by the sight of chairman Steve Morgan congratulating his players at the full-time whistle. But McCarthy insists it is nothing out of the ordinary to see the supremo giving his support.
"He cares about it, he's just like everybody else, he wants us to win and do well," said the Wolves boss. "He's very supportive, it's great. But it's not over and above anything else because that's the way he is with me. It is nice that he comes down and everybody else sees that, I see it all the time."
Birmingham never really operated through the gears and were firmly second best all afternoon, leaving them still without an away win since March. And manager Alex McLeish admitted his side's lack of fight was uncharacteristic as they suffered only a second defeat in nine games.
"We never really started until the substitutes came on. We had a go at Wolves then and it was the first time we pinned them back," said the Scot. "But I think you have to give Wolves a lot of credit, they lost some key players and I didn't know whether psychologically that put some complacency in their heads.
"But at the same time I did say to the players that Wolves really had a cause today, the fact they're in the bottom three is one and then losing those big players I'm sure gave every other player an extra 10%.
"It was a poor performance. If you've seen us in all our games this season you'll see that was out of character but you have to give Wolves credit."
McLeish played down Foster's heroics, which was surprising given the quality of his stops.
"He made some saves, I need to have a look at how brilliant they were. I thought there were a lot of routine saves there," McLeish added.
McCarthy responded: "He's a very good 'keeper and if they're routine then fabulous, but he kept them out of the net whether they're routine or great saves. Wayne hasn't even made one routine save."
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