BURNLEY will again be without captain Ben Mee when they host Manchester City on Saturday and there are doubts over his chances of being involved in next week’s clashes with Everton and Norwich. The defender has sat out the Clarets’ last two matches, against Chelsea and Brentford, after coming off injured in the first half against Leicester on March 1. Burnley, who lost all three games, are currently 19th in the Premier League with 21 points from 27 games, four points behind 17th-placed Everton. After playing leaders City at Turf Moor this weekend, they then face Everton at home next Wednesday before travelling to rock-bottom Norwich four days later.
Sean Dyche said: “Ben Mee is making progress but won’t be there yet.”
Dyche was then asked if any players who have been out would have a chance for next Wednesday or Sunday,
Sean Dyche said: “We’ll wait and see. I doubt it with Ben.”
Fellow centre-back Nathan Collins is suspended after being sent off against Brentford, while full-back Erik Pieters, midfielder Johann Berg Gudmundsson and forward Matej Vydra are the other sidelined players.
Sean Dyche said: “It’s a big challenge against Man City and the likes, the super-powers as I call them. We’ve beaten these sides in the past, but it’s very difficult. I don’t think our season’s going to be made on this game, but it’s helpful if you can get a result of some kind. We’ll take it on, that’s what you have to do in these games. We’ll certainly be focusing on Man City. Our mentality is to set up a team that can win, and then we park that one and move forwards. We have to keep fighting, working and playing hard against whoever’s in front of us. The Premier League is very unforgiving. It doesn’t give you a breather, you have to keep being relentless in your thinking. That’s what I spoke to the players about – win or lose, we have to keep being relentless until the final whistle of the season.”
It was reported last week that Burnley had had a bid to sign Victor Moses, who has been in Russia with Spartak Moscow, blocked by the Premier League, and when asked about that
Sean Dyche said: “There isn’t any side (of the story) to tell at the moment. It’s just another player, another situation, that we’ve been linked with.”
Dyche was also asked about Premier League clubs agreeing to allow five substitutions from the start of next season, and sought to clarify what his position has been on the matter.
Sean Dyche said: “I’ve only shared a common sense view, nothing other. The big clubs are in lots of tournaments, I understand why they’d want five subs definitely. I would if I was at one of those clubs and you’re in many tournaments, you’ve got many international players. My point has always been for the smaller clubs like ourselves, it’s a bigger challenge, because teams can rotate so easily – there’s a clutch (where) we all know you can change five players and the team wouldn’t look much weaker, if at all. So it just gives them a little bit more leeway.