Liverpool midfielder Jay Spearing wants to secure a regular first-team place in order to be able to play at Wembley.
The Reds face Cardiff in the final of the Carling Cup later this month and having just returned to the squad after injury, the 23-year-old has set himself a short-term goal.
"I've got to take it day by day, keep improving and keep getting better," said the academy graduate, who made his comeback after four matches out with a hamstring injury in Tuesday's win at Wolves.
"There is a lot of competition in the club. We're known worldwide and anyone would love to come and play for us, so I've got to keep on my toes and keep fighting to get that place.
"I've got to nail it down, get the games going and try to get that Carling Cup final place."
Spearing has had something of a stop-start season and with the likes of Lucas Leiva missing the rest of the campaign after knee surgery and captain Steven Gerrard also spending a long time sidelined with injury, he would have wanted to play more.
Just when it seemed he would get his chance, starting back-to-back matches for the first time since May, he was sent off in December's defeat at Fulham. Having served a three-match suspension he returned after Christmas to start four successive matches but a hamstring injury forced him out again.
The sending-off at Craven Cottage had manager Kenny Dalglish reaching for the DVD to highlight the refereeing inconsistencies in that game but for Spearing it was all part of the learning experience.
"The support I had from the club and people around helped me after that red card," he told liverpoolfc.tv.
"Some people thought it was [a sending-off], some thought it wasn't but it was one of those things in my career I had to learn from. I've done that and I've come back fighting stronger and harder."
The Reds face Cardiff in the final of the Carling Cup later this month and having just returned to the squad after injury, the 23-year-old has set himself a short-term goal.
"I've got to take it day by day, keep improving and keep getting better," said the academy graduate, who made his comeback after four matches out with a hamstring injury in Tuesday's win at Wolves.
"There is a lot of competition in the club. We're known worldwide and anyone would love to come and play for us, so I've got to keep on my toes and keep fighting to get that place.
"I've got to nail it down, get the games going and try to get that Carling Cup final place."
Spearing has had something of a stop-start season and with the likes of Lucas Leiva missing the rest of the campaign after knee surgery and captain Steven Gerrard also spending a long time sidelined with injury, he would have wanted to play more.
Just when it seemed he would get his chance, starting back-to-back matches for the first time since May, he was sent off in December's defeat at Fulham. Having served a three-match suspension he returned after Christmas to start four successive matches but a hamstring injury forced him out again.
The sending-off at Craven Cottage had manager Kenny Dalglish reaching for the DVD to highlight the refereeing inconsistencies in that game but for Spearing it was all part of the learning experience.
"The support I had from the club and people around helped me after that red card," he told liverpoolfc.tv.
"Some people thought it was [a sending-off], some thought it wasn't but it was one of those things in my career I had to learn from. I've done that and I've come back fighting stronger and harder."
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