Danny Drinkwater will get a second chance, says Burnley boss Sean Dyche
Burnley manager Sean Dyche is pleased to give a chance after the midfielder had been hurt in an incident outside a nightclub to Danny Drinkwater.
Even the on-loan Chelsea midfielder suffered a foot problem that’s set to rule out him for a number of months and was envisioned with injuries.
Dyche is referred to as a manager who values professionalism tremendously but, publicly, he dropped to criticise Drinkwater, saying:”[Footballers] are now human beings, they do have private lives, which sometimes are not private, obviously. And occasionally they get in scrapes.
“He is definitely old enough and wise enough to understand you do whatever you can not get in scratches, but sometimes it occurs.
“We’ve been big over our time here – you can not simply talk about development if it’s very great news, but you also must work with gamers if things aren’t quite as good.
“It’s been that type of scenario, have a conversation with him and say, what happened Firstly, what was the situation that contributed to it. OK, let’s go away from this where to do we go from here. I feel that’s where we are at.”
Dyche declined to reveal whether Burnley have punished Drinkwater, stating:”Only talked to him, the rest of it is private.”
The 29-year-old produced his Clarets introduction at the Carabao Cup defeat with missed the start of the season after being frozen out of the picture at Chelsea to build up his fitness.
Dyche included:”He’s a player that I had worked together at Watford. I believe I understand a small bit about what he is around, he’s had a lot happen since a lot of successes in his career, of course, so that I believe we would like to get him back to that .
“This is simply a bump from the situation. We wish to ensure he gets back to being completely fit, playing well, the attention of the tiger it takes to be a leading player.”
Talking on the harm sustained by Drinkwater, Dyche stated:”This bit’s not ideal. It’s part and parcel of the incident. It’s still going to be certainly a couple of months and then getting in another game to catch up although it’s not too serious.
“When you take a player in, he’s part of people. So we’ll work with Danny and try to help him and, notably, he must get himself fit.”
Read more here: http://demo.nu.edu.eg/?p=24627