SEAN Dyche admits he would love a crack at the England job at some point in his career, but insists the current Three Lions vacancy is too soon for him.

The 45-year-old is still just 231 games into his managerial club career, and while he is no doubt about the allure of the England job, he believes he needs far more experience at club level before considering the national job.

The Football Association find themselves with another job to fill this week after they parted ways with Sam Allardyce following controversial remarks he made to undercover newspaper reporters.

With the FA again likely to look at English bosses Dyche could come under consideration following his achievements at Turf Moor, but he believes the job should go to a more experienced boss.

“Would I be interested at some point in the future? You’d want to have a go at the England job,” he said

“My CV is not deep enough, I don’t feel, to take that on now.

“I could in the sense of ‘go on, I could have a go’ but you want to be in a position in anything in life when you’ve got the depth of knowledge and experience to actually achieve something, not just take it on because you can.

“It’s not that I wouldn’t want to do it ever, because I would somewhere down the line if it ever came my way. But I think you have to have the layers in place to make a success of it.

“There are other people out there at the moment who are in a better place to take on a challenge like that.”

Despite the difficulty that comes with the job Dyche still believes it holds appeal, and he feels that interim boss Gareth Southgate deserves his chance with the senior set-up.

“With Gareth Southgate why wouldn’t you at least give him that window? He’s been with the FA he’s been learning with the FA,” said Dyche.

“He’s the most obvious one, he’s been around it, he’s experienced it as a player, with working at the FA and working with a technical director and the under-21s.

“We all know how tough a job it is. It’s one of the rare jobs you can be successful and still get questioned. You’ve got to be ready for that.”

It has previously been suggested that a young manager, such as Dyche or Bournemouth’s Eddie Howe, could come in under a more experienced boss to learn the ropes ready for a smooth transition, but the Clarets chief isn’t sure how that would work.

“If you are that man sitting around, what happens in your club life?” he said.

“Do you get replaced if your club life doesn’t go so well or do they say ‘well actually it goes beyond club life because we know how difficult that is?’ Or do you get removed and they put someone else in?

“How long is that for? Is it a contractual thing? Do you just turn up and float around and see what goes on?

“It kind of makes sense in one way, that a manager will be around it and in the thought process and has a feel of it if it comes his way.

“But on the other hand while the current manager is taking it forward, if the manager sitting behind him isn’t doing that well at club level, then we all know what the angle would be if that manager then gets appointed.

“In theory, yes, in practicality and in the real world of football, I’m not sure how it would work.”