SEAN Dyche will not change Burnley’s away game routine ahead of a four game run of road trips for the Clarets.

Dyche’s side will look to improve on a record of one point from 11 Premier League away games this season over the next month.

That starts with a trip to the KCOM Stadium to face Hull City today (3pm), a ground where the Clarets have won on five of their last six visits.

Despite being yet to win on the road this season, Dyche isn’t planning on tearing up the usual pre-match preparations between now and March 18 as Burnley face trips to Hull, Swansea, Liverpool and Sunderland.

“I’m not really superstitious,” said the Clarets chief. “I think if your routine is correct, and work is correct in the sense of the knowledge and information you’ve given, the plan and set up, really, you’re just quirking on mindset.

“If the players wanted to change something and I felt that was important, yes, but tactical work, team work, I’m not so big on changing that – if it’s good work, it’s good work.

“The chef doesn’t change the ingredients, but maybe the way he throws them around, it’s more like that.

“But the basic plan of how we work and prepare is decent and has served us well over a long period, so we’ll not be going for fish and chips the night before a game or anything like that!

“The first away win will come from good work.”

The Clarets travel to Humberside on the back of an FA Cup fifth round exit to non-league Lincoln City a week ago, but Dyche declared that defeat in the past and stressed that it wasn’t a case of looking to rebound from that loss.

“There’s no bouncing back about it, it’s a different competition. It’s not the end goal this season, it would have been a nice bonus,” he said. “It’s not relevant to what goes forward, it’s a different competition, different mindset, different players, it goes away very quickly.”

Asked whether it was a test to get his side over last week’s cup shock, Dyche said: “There’s no test other than being in the Premier League, that’s the biggest test you’ll have.

“It’s not about any one result, it’s about every result.

“Not getting too high with the highs or too low with the lows, that’s the Premier League. You can have a good run then a bad run very quickly.

“The differential about the cup is that the Premier League has moved forward so far that it is the be all and end all of every season for the clubs in the league.

“Look at the money being spent to try and get in it. It’s not about pushing it aside or doing the FA Cup down.

“It’s a fantastic trophy, it’s just a fact that the Premier League is where everyone wants to be.”