
Portsmouth manager Avram Grant will shuffle his team for their crunch clash against Sunderland at Fratton Park.
With Pompey six points adrift at the bottom of the Barclays Premier League table, Grant knows repeating their FA Cup victory against the free-falling Black Cats could be crucial to their hopes of avoiding relegation.
The Israeli rested a number of players for their 5-0 defeat against Manchester United on Saturday, including Aruna Dindane and Hassan Yebda.
Grant told www.portsmouthfc.co.uk: "I thought we needed to keep some players fresh because we've played a lot of games recently.
"We changed the team and it will be different again on Tuesday."
Portsmouth are seven points from safety and 10 behind tonight's opponents, who sit 13th, but, with matches against Stoke and Burnley to come later this month, Grant remains optimistic.
He added: "There are 14 games to go and we need to take as many points as possible from our next few games. Our upcoming games are against sides who are around us in the table.
"We are not playing worse than the sides in mid-table but they're taking points and we're not. We need to continue with the good performances but also add some points."
Portsmouth could be without Kevin-Prince Boateng and Anthony Vanden Borre after both limped off against United.
Steve Finnan could replace Vanden Borre at right-back. John Utaka (hamstring) may return but Papa Bouba Diop is still sidelined.
Meanwhile, Portsmouth chief executive Peter Storrie admits the club's best hope for tomorrow's court date with HM Revenue & Customs is to delay the winding-up order.
HMRC issued the petition over unpaid debts at the end of last year and the club failed in their bid to have it struck out by a High Court judge in a hearing on January 16.
Since then, Hong Kong businessman Balram Chainrai has become Pompey's fourth owner of the season after last week acquiring Ali Al Faraj's 90% stake in the club.
Chainrai's main intention is to recover money he is owed by the club, however, and Portsmouth are seeking yet another owner to take on responsibility for the long term.
Storrie, who was been charged with running the club on a day-to-day basis, is optimistic they will avoid going into administration.
He told ESPN Soccernet: "Our priority is Wednesday's court date with the Revenue.
"Our objective, now the new owner is in place, is to seek from the courts a stay of the winding-up order. We need time for a new buyer to come in and then we will be in a position to pay the Revenue.
"If the Revenue wind this club up, then they will get nothing, and that cannot be the right answer. We're in talks with potential new owners, which would be our fifth owner already this season."
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