Wolves sealed an FA Cup semi-final spot as goals from Raul Jimenez and Diogo Jota saw off Manchester United 2-1 at Molineux.
It is the first time Nuno Espirito Santo's side have reached the last four of the competition since 1997-98 and they thoroughly deserved their victory over an insipid United team.
Jimenez fired home inside a crowded area after 70 minutes before Jota turned Luke Shaw inside out to add a second six minutes later and put the game beyond United.
Ole Gunnar Solskjaer's side – who had won nine away games in a row before last weekend's Premier League defeat to Arsenal – did find a late consolation through Marcus Rashford but can have no complaints with the result.
FT: @Wolves join @WatfordFC and @ManCity in the #EmiratesFACup semi-finals! pic.twitter.com/PYrKned6pP
— The Emirates FA Cup (@EmiratesFACup) March 16, 2019
Paul Pogba clipped wide and Rashford tested John Ruddy from distance as the hosts comfortably kept United at bay during a tepid opening half hour.
Shortly before the interval, Sergio Romero was out quickly to paw away a clean-through Jota's effort after Wolves had countered quickly from a United corner.
Rashford blazed wide within a minute of the restart before Romero superbly tipped Jimenez's header onto the crossbar.
The Argentina international was called into action again shortly before the hour mark, tipping over Joao Moutinho's deflected effort after a period of intense Wolves pressure.
That pressure finally told 20 minutes from time when Jimenez swivelled among a posse of United players in the penalty area and sent a half-volley past Romero.
Another sharp Wolves counter-attack resulted in the second soon after as Jota left Shaw in a heap on the floor and drilled a low effort past Romero, who will feel that he should have done better.
A late red card for Victor Lindelof was overturned by VAR, which decided his foul on Jota was only worth a yellow card, before Rashford collected Shaw's cross and buried it into the bottom corner with almost the last kick of the game.
However, it proved too little, too late for a United side who were well beaten by their less illustrious Premier League opponents.
What does it mean? A stark lesson for Solskjaer
Almost everything that the Norwegian has touched since he took over the reins at United has turned to gold, but he was powerless to stop a rampant Wolves side. From the very outset they wanted it more than the Red Devils and could comfortably have won by more.
Jota too hot to handle
Shaw will be having nightmares about how ruthlessly Jota exposed him for the second goal. He comfortably beat the England full-back and dispatched a powerful strike past Romero to cap a memorable display.
Pogba anonymous
The World Cup winner contributed nothing in either attack or defence for his side. Ruben Neves and Moutinho do not receive anything like the same plaudits as the 26-year-old, but they utterly outshone him with performances brimming with verve and invention.
What's next?
Both sides return to Premier League action after the international break with Wolves visiting Burnley and United hosting Watford.