JAY Jay Okocha says Wanderers are heading for the drop unless they can sort out their home form.

Saturday's last second equaliser for Blackburn cost Wanderers two more home points and pointed the finger at the problem which is keeping Wanderers rooted in the relegation zone.

The Wanderers camp know they deserved more for their efforts on Saturday as they have done so often this season when so many points have been dropped at the Reebok.

The record shows just one win, two defeats and five draws so far at home in the Premiership, just eight points out of a possible 24 and Okocha says the team must shake off the fear factor.

"We are not winning at home and if you don't win your home games you go down," said the mercurial Nigerian who provided the foundation for what should have been victory with a stunning first goal - his first at the Reebok.

"We seem to be scared at home because of the position we are in and the fans will not settle for anything other than a win.

"We are feeling the pressure but we only have ourselves to blame because we have put ourselves in this situation.

"We are very disappointed to have conceded a goal at the end but it is not the first time we have done it.

"You could accept it if it was the first time we had done it but it isn't. It is the third or fourth time.

"We keep making the same mistake and by doing it we have put ourselves in this situation. It is getting more and more difficult for us but we are not going to throw in the towel. We will keep fighting."

Manager Sam Allardyce agrees things must change for the better at home if his side is going to drag itself out of the relegation zone.

"Only having won one game at home is something we must change," he said.

"We have got to start turning these results into victories and we must keep working and believing.

"We also need a big of good fortune to turn the corner because at the moment it seems we are not able to do it by ourselves."

Wanderers were heading for their first clean sheet in 13 games before Craig Short equalised in the 96th minute of a game in which four minutes were indicated for extra time.

Allardyce refused to blame referee Neale Barry saying: "Some referees will have just played the four minutes but he could say he played extra for stoppages in the added on time. We can't blame him because we had plenty of chances in both halves to score more goals.

"We can't expect to keep a clean sheet now so I have stopped going on about it. I feel like we are not going to get one so we need to score at least two goals to win a game."

There was more bad news on the injury front with Ricardo Gardner and Paul Warhurst limping out of Saturday's game and onto the treatment table.

Allardyce rued: "We are having terrible luck with injuries at the moment. No sooner do we get a couple of players back than we get another two injuries."