Leeds United captain Richard Naylor says fans should recognise the players' sense of purpose over their muted celebrations following victory at Manchester United.
Tottenham are Leeds' next opponents in the FA Cup and Naylor says everyone at the club is driven to lifting them back into the Premier League.
He told the Daily Mail: "There is a pressure that comes with it, because so many friends and family members are so desperate for Leeds to do well. My mum and dad used to take me to Headingley as a nipper and sit me on the wall at the front. I think dad would have liked me to have become a rugby player, but he's as proud as anyone at how things have turned out.
"It drives you on. I've turned 30, and I know I haven't got that long to achieve what I want to, which is to help Leeds back to the top. That's why no one went over the top at Old Trafford, special though it was.
"There was no hysterical celebration in the dressing room afterwards. I remember sitting there, with a calm sense of satisfaction but feeling the important part was still to come.
"It will be the same at Tottenham. We want to get through, but it would mean even more to secure promotion and be a step nearer returning Leeds to where we belong."