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December 14, 2017

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Dyche’s method is behind the madness of Burnley’s rise up the Premier League table

BURNLEY’S unlikely rise to fourth place in the English Premier League is this season’s ‘Cinderella’ story but the stereotype of the mill town Lancashire club led by a gruff ‘old-school’ manager disguises the very effective method behind its rise.

The 1-0 win over Stoke City on Tuesday propelled Burnley into the UEFA Champions League places, at least until Liverpool, Arsenal and Tottenham Hotspur play later yesterday and led Dyche to encourage the club’s fans to “dream”.

A return to European football for the Clarets, who featured as English champions in the European Cup in 1961 and reached the quarterfinals of the Fairs Cup, the forerunner of the modern-day Europa League, in 1967, is probably in the realms of dreamland.

But the league table does not lie and the numbers tell the story of a team that is certainly achieving well above any reasonable expectations.

A solid defense has been the foundation of Dyche’s team throughout his five years at Turf Moor and currently only leader Manchester City and Manchester United have conceded less than Burnley’s 12 goals from 17 games this season.

In 2-1/2 seasons with Dyche in the top flight, Burnley has picked up 27 EPL victories, 15 of them have been 1-0, a total of 55 percent.

Indeed, taking into account Championship wins, a total 33 of Dyche’s 92 league victories with Burnley have been by that scoreline.

“Brian Clough used to love a 1-0 and he was a genius and everything. He used to tell the players. Clean sheet, score a goal,” said Dyche, who began his playing career under Clough at Nottingham Forest. “I love them 1-0s, absolutely love them. Every manager does.”

The last two wins, both by that scoreline, over Watford and Stoke, reveal another aspect of Dyche’s success — improving players and getting the very best out of relatively limited resources.

Watford was beaten by a goal from Scott Arfield, a midfielder picked up on a free transfer in 2013 from then Championship side Huddersfield Town.

The 89th-minute winner against Stoke came from Ashley Barnes, signed for the modest fee of around 750,000 pounds (US$1 million) from Brighton and Hove Albion nearly four years ago.

Burnley isn’t quite a team of a bargain basement signings though — center-forward Chris Wood cost 15 million pounds when bought from Leeds United earlier this season and midfielders Jack Cork, Robbie Brady and Jeff Hendrick were all bought for fees between 10-15 million pounds.

But, along with excellent organization, Dyche’s ability to improve talent has been the key to the rise of his team.

Indeed during his time at the club, three players have won England caps while playing for the Clarets — goalkeeper Tom Heaton, defender Michael Keane (now with Everton) and midfielder Cork. Reports suggest England manager Gareth Southgate is currently keeping close tabs on center-halves Ben Mee and James Tarkowski, too.

Such a record suggests Dyche and his coaching staff, which includes former Nottingham Forest winger Ian Woan, are able to focus on areas of improvement for individuals as well as incorporate them into an effective team structure.

Burnley’s style of play is often described as ‘direct’ with credit given purely for its defensive organization and while that is a fair description of its successful battle against relegation last season, it fails to do credit to its improvement this campaign.

A greater emphasis on possession and passing and movement was evident even in preseason games, helped by the arrival of the talented but often under-valued Cork from Swansea City.

Cork has formed a valuable central midfield partnership with Belgian Steven Defour who, after struggling initially to cope with the Dyche mantra of “maximum effort is the minimum demand”, has also become an essential part of the team’s success.

The pair has ensured that Burnley is able to control games with possession much more effectively than it did in previous EPL efforts.

Dyche described the style as “mixed football” and sees nothing wrong with a pragmatic approach to tactics, saying he is bemused that is considered a negative.

While some obsess over possession and passing statistics and playing the game, the supposed ‘right way’, Dyche knows what counts the most.

“I don’t believe fans see a team consistently and go ‘at least we’re losing the right way, I’m really enjoying this’.

“It’s a strange myth. Playing the right way is only good when you’re winning,” he said.

Dyche applies plenty of modern methods in his coaching but his core thinking is traditional.

“The two things that will never go out of fashion, the desire to win will never become non-trendy, and the achievement of winning and working hard,” the Briton said.

“If that’s your minimum, and you build on that — which is what we’re trying to do — that’s a good start point.”




 

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