BRIAN Jensen is targeting back-to-back wins to kick-start Burnley’s season, and keep the Clarets out of the bottom three.

Having spent more than a week in the relegation zone, Brian Laws’ men climbed back up to 15th by picking up three points for the first time since October with Saturday’s 2-1 win over West Ham United.

Jensen aims to build on that by claiming a first Premier League away win at Fulham tonight, and he believes a more resolute approach instilled by new boss Laws will soon pay dividends.

“We are more organised,” said the Danish goalkeeper, who has his sights set on a first clean sheet since beating Hull City three months ago.

“It’s different. You’re trying to find a balance now where we’re playing a lot of positive football going forward.

"Maybe we didn’t focus too much at the back and defensively before now.

"But the gaffer is trying to add a little bit of that, to try to be more organised and tactically maybe go a little bit differently about it, especially in away games.

“We know what to do. But we also know in this league, you can try to prevent it, but if the service is good and the run is good - like you saw with John Terry when we played Chelsea - it doesn’t matter.

“We do look more solid but we still have to find the balance between playing good football and being organised at the same time. We’re slowly getting there.”

And Jensen feels a long-awaited win could speed up the process.

“Of course it gave us a boost – we hadn’t won for ages.

“Hopefully it was a turning point on Saturday and fingers crossed we can do even better at Fulham. That could kick-start our season again,” said the 34-year-old, who revealed the frustrations of a winless three-month spell.

“It’s tough, definitely,” he continued.

“We’re in the best league in the world now, playing against the best opposition and in the best grounds in the world.

“If you don’t get the results and you’re not confident it will always be tough.

“Confidence is everything in football.

“If you’re not confident and you don’t have a strong mentality you might as well just pack it in.

“It’s a tough season. We just have to keep on our toes and see if we can get that clean sheet again, that would be nice because it’s been a while now,” added Jensen, who has made the most saves in the Premier League according to the Opta statistics.

“I’m there to make the saves. We just want the points on the table and stay in this league.”

And manager Laws has urged his players not to dip below the standards they set in securing his first win since taking charge last month.

“We’re fighting against good players and good clubs.

"If we can’t match them for ability then what we can do is work extremely hard, as we did on Saturday against a very good West Ham side,” he said.

“You throw your body in the way, you work hard, and the stats don’t lie.

“On the ProZone stats we’ve worked harder than they have, we’ve run further than West Ham. It shows you that you have to put in the groundwork.

“The players know it was a fantastic win but that’s the start.

"We’ve set the bar and set the targets and now we’ve got to change the mentality away from home, and if we can get a result away from home that will just embrace everything that we’re doing at the moment.

“We can’t afford to drift off the high standard because anything less then we won’t win a game in the Premier League.

"We have to be at our best, on full throttle, and hope the opposition are below that. There’s a weakness in every team.”

Lapses in concentration have proved to be Burnley’s Achilles heel this season, but Laws admitted he is working hard to iron out such errors.

“The lads have made some elementary mistakes, which you get away with in the Championship, but you get murdered in the Premier League,” he said.

“The opposition might only have two or three opportunities, but they’ll bury them.

“I watched Birmingham against Wolves, who were in full control with 10 minutes left, and they lose 2-1 with two slip-ups, not getting tight.

“Give a player time and space, the likes of (Kevin) Phillips, and it’s in the back of the net.

“We’re renowned for passing, but getting nothing at the end of it I don’t want to be renowned for.

“We’ve got to change and mix our game up. We still want the football element, absolutely, that’s the way I like to play, on the floor, attractive football, but there’s the dirty side of the game, making sure the team works to the degree where we know exactly what we’re doing.

“That gung-ho approach hurts you at this level, but we’re getting stronger.”