JUSSI Jaaskelainen is not unduly worried by Wanderers recent fall from grace.

The long-serving keeper has seen good times and bad in his 14 years at the Reebok, and does not consider the slump suffered by Owen Coyle’s side, which has seen them go five league games without victory, as a insurmountable problem.

The Whites have a chance to get their European charge back on track tonight against Wolves, where victory could see them climb back into the top 10.

And having twice helped the club on to the continent, Jaaskelainen refuses to write off their chances based on the side’s poor January form.

“Everyone knows we’re having a tough time at the moment but there are so many games in a season, every team goes through a bad spell, apart from maybe the champions or those who finish in the Champions League spots,” he said.

“You can’t start thinking about it too much or getting yourself down.

“There’s no point in putting pressure on yourself. You just have to keep believing in what you are doing.

“We’re only at the halfway point now. There are lots of games to go.

“In the past we have gone seven, eight or nine games without winning but still finished in the European places.”

Jaaskelainen was criticised in some quarters after Wanderers’ last Premier League outing, a 4-0 defeat against Chelsea. And while the Big Finn accepts his share of the blame, he reckons the side can ill-afford to dwell on the result tonight.

“It was one of those games where you just didn’t feel you were getting any luck,” he said. “The first one (from Didier Drogba) moved all over the place. Some days you would save that, others you don’t. I don’t often concede goals from 35 yards.

“The second goal (from Florent Malouda) arrived so quickly and I couldn’t move my left foot the way I wanted.

“We were up for it from the start, so were the fans, but the goals changed the game.

“You can’t stop believing just because of one result, though. If we keep going like we have been doing, we will be okay.”