DANNY Ings has declared tomorrow's game at Wolves the biggest of the season, as Burnley bid to finally put any doubts about their Championship future to bed.

The Clarets are six places above the drop zone but not enough points clear for them to assume they are safe, with just two games to go.

Wolves boss Dean Saunders has told his players they must win both to have a hope of avoiding a second straight relegation.

And Ings hopes Burnley can capitalise on the home side feeling the pressure to fight their own cause.

“It’s the most important game of the season for us,” said the forward.

FROM BACK PAGE “We’ve been drafted into a relegation battle really so it’s important that we fight in the last two games to be the results we need.

“You’ve got to look at every game as it comes as one you want to get three points from. You can’t think before the game ‘if we lose this we’re in trouble because automatically that’s negative and you’ve got to stay positive.

“With this league it’s so tight a few results can change a lot of things but you’ve got to take every game as it comes.

“We’re all well aware of where we are and what we’ve been drafted into. We all know what we’ve got to do to turn it round and get out of it.

“The lads are calm and we’re just preparing ourselves to be ready for it.

“You’ve got to go into it as any other game otherwise the lads could get nervous and it could have a negative effect.”

Ings admits it was the loss at Leeds that alerted them to the perils of their position, having dropped to within three points of the drop zone.

“If we’d won there we’d be all right now,” said the former Bournemouth striker. “That defeat hurt a lot because we didn’t turn up and play like ourselves. That result sort of dragged us into it.

“I’m sure we’ll get back out of it and be fine, as long as we work hard as a team we’ll come out the other side.

“It was good to turn it around in the second half against Cardiff. Hopefully we can build on that and take it into the next game.

“You only get one chance now to turn up, if you don’t you could be in trouble. But I’m sure the lads will. The lads are calm and they know what they’ve got to do.”

Ings added: “If we start the first 20 minutes flying and hopefully get an early goal their crowd will get on their back and we can take control of the game – with all the expectation you never know.

“I just feel that even though we are down there amongst it there is much more pressure on them than there is us.”

And Ings is hoping to play his part after returning to the line-up against Cardiff.

“The last two games I started we got draws against two great sides in Watford and Cardiff so hopefully I can get a starting place and work hard for the team,” said the 20-year-old, who would have marked his recall with a goal against the champions last weekend but for goalkeeper David Marshall.

“It was a great save to be fair,” Ings recalled. “I hit it cleanly and he pulled off an unbelievable save so I take my hat off to him.”