Sutter: All the pressure on Spurs

Young Boys defender Scott Sutter inists hosts Tottenham have "everything to lose" ahead of the Champions League play-off second leg. Sutter will fulfil a boyhood dream when he runs out at White Hart Lane - although it will be against, rather than for, the team he grew up supporting.But it will not be the first time the 24-year-old from Enfield has taken to the field there, having done so when he and his father were season-ticket holders in the 1990s.Describing coming back to White Hart Lane as a player as "a special feeling", Sutter said: "I remember waiting behind the gates for autographs from players when I was there with my dad and I snuck into the stadium and got a piece of grass and kept it home for about three weeks."Asked if he planned to bring some more turf back to Bern with him, Sutter added: "We'll see how the game goes first - maybe the ball."Indeed, Sutter will have no qualms knocking Spurs out of Europe's premier club competition, having helped his side build a 3-2 first-leg lead last week.He acknowledges they remain outsiders in the tie having squandered most of their 3-0 lead in the first leg, but said: "I don't think it's gone. I think everything's still open in the game."I think they've got more pressure than us first of all."We've got nothing to lose."They've got everything to lose."If we can get through the first 20-25 minutes without conceding a goal then I think we've got a fairly good chance."And Sutter hopes Spurs take Young Boys lightly, just as he believes they did in the first leg."I definitely think they did underestimate us - I think it's understandable," he said."A lot of bigger teams we play underestimate us."I don't think the difference between a team like Tottenham - or a team in the top leagues - and a team in our league is that big anymore, and that's proved time and time again."Sutter and his Young Boys team-mates' trip to London did not get off to the most auspicious start today when they arrived almost an hour late for their pre-match press conference.Sutter revealed their taxi driver had got lost, despite insisting he knew where White Hart Lane was and that the squad resorted to getting on a double-decker bus in an attempt to get to the stadium.The mishap is the sort that appears only to befall Europe's smaller sides.But Young Boys are not concerned about the impression others - or Spurs - have of them.Midfielder David Degen said: "Quite frankly, what Spurs think, I don't really care about it."Those sentiments were echoed by manager Vladmir Petkovic, whose only injury absentees are Emiliano Dudar and Hassan Lingani.

Source: Team_Talk