During the Falklands War, Sea Wolf was the Royal Navy's only modern point-defence weapon. It equipped the Type 22 frigates
HMS Brilliant, and the Batch 3A Leander class frigate . These ships were assigned "goalkeeper" duties, to provide close anti-aircraft defence of the carrier task force. In an attempt to overcome the fleet's overall air defence deficiency following the loss of , a new tactic was devised, which saw each of the two Type 22 frigates paired with each of the two remaining
Type 42 (area air defence) destroyers. The pairing was unofficially termed "Type 64", the sum of both classes numbers. The two pairs were deployed some distance from the main fleet, covering likely attack routes, in an attempt to draw attacking aircraft into a "missile trap", the intention being that, if the Type 42 was unable to engage targets at longer ranges with its
Sea Dart missiles, the Type 22 would use its short-range Sea Wolf missiles to defend both ships. On 12 May 1982,
Brilliant and were operating in combination and were attacked by two flights of four
Argentine Douglas A-4 Skyhawk aircraft.
Brilliant shot down two of these and caused a third to crash trying to avoid the missile. The second wave of aircraft attacked during a failure of the missile system and the Type 42
Glasgow sustained damage. On 25 May 1982, and
Broadsword also operating in a 22/42 combination to the north-west of
Falkland Sound came under attack by two waves of two A-4 Skyhawks.
Broadsword attempted to target the first pair with Sea Wolf but the tracking system locked down and could not be reset before the aircraft released their bombs.
Broadsword was hit by one bomb, which bounced up through the deck and destroyed her
Westland Lynx helicopter. The second pair of Skyhawks headed for
Coventry 90 seconds later at a 20-degree angle to her port bow. On
Broadsword the Sea Wolf system had been reset and acquired the attacking aircraft but
Coventrys evasive manoeuvring took her through the line of fire and the lock was lost.
Coventry was struck by three bombs and sank shortly after. Sea Wolf suffered from problems with hardware failure causing launches to fail, broken locks from the extreme sea conditions and the Argentines' low-altitude hit-and-run tactics with multiple, crossing targets which it was not designed to intercept. Sea Wolf accounted for three confirmed "kills" and two further possibles from eight launches. ==Variants==