Luka Milivojevic own goal hands Burnley point at Crystal Palace

Sean Dyche praised the mentality of his Burnley team after they fought back to earn a draw at Crystal Palace and make it a seven-point week.

Jeffrey Schlupp fired the hosts ahead after nine minutes in south London and the Clarets at this point looked to be struggling after vital but taxing recent wins over Brighton and Tottenham.

The visitors came out with more belief after the break and equalised within 40 seconds after the Palace captain, Luka Milivojevic, deflected Aaron Lennon’s cross into his own net to ensure both teams had to settle for a 12th draw in the Premier League this season.

“We have had a big week, an important week and that’s another point on the board. I think it is only one loss in seven now, so that is good for the mentality of the side,” Dyche said. “I think first-half there were a few cloudy minds, but I didn’t think there was much in it with our performance other than that, and then second half there was a great mentality towards it.

“We ask a lot of these players. We came all the way down to Brighton [last Saturday], it took hours. Then we came down here and it took hours. I drove down and it took me seven [hours] so it is a big ask and those type of journeys are not ideal. We looked a bit sluggish in the first-half but it was a very strong response second half, I thought.”

Lennon produced another decisive display with the assist for Burnley’s equaliser, which keeps them in 18th position but within touching distance of safety.

The former Tottenham winger rejoined the club in August and has been a regular in recent weeks, scoring against Manchester United and Brighton.

Jeffrey Schlupp celebrates scoring with Marc Guehi.
Jeffrey Schlupp celebrates scoring with Marc Guehi. Photograph: Peter Cziborra/Action Images/Reuters

“He has been good since he has been here,” said Dyche. “He is still the fastest player at the club and is driving at players. He has got back to that edge of going forward more.

“For a very talented player, he sometimes goes square and short. He is now stretching the pitch, breaking in behind, running at people and is forever honest.

“Defensively he does a marvellous job for the side, is willing to work, and he is certainly getting the rewards for looking after himself for all these years because he is a top pro and is delivering very good performances.”

Patrick Vieira paid tribute to Burnley after they made life tough for the 11th-placed hosts, especially after the break. Trickery from Michael Olise on the right set up Schlupp for an early opener.

Chances were few and far between after the deadlock was broken, but the Palace goalkeeper, Jack Butland, kept out Wout Weghorst’s second-half header while Wilfried Zaha saw one late effort saved by Nick Pope and another rebound off the post.

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“We scored that first goal but I think we overall didn’t play really well, we didn’t play well because they put us under pressure,” Vieira said. “I think we couldn’t play well because they worked hard to close us down and we didn’t move the ball quick enough.

“I believe at times we played their game, meaning we played too many long balls and we didn’t make good decisions, but I think we didn’t make the decision because they made it very difficult for us.” PA Media

source: theguardian.com