BURNLEY will hope that lightning can strike twice in the Potteries tomorrow as they seek to record a first Premier League away win of the season at Stoke - just as they did two seasons ago.

In 2014/15 the Clarets broke their duck on the road with a 2-1 success at the Britannia Stadium, as Danny Ings struck twice on the counter attack within 90 seconds before a quarter-of-an-hour had been played.

Burnley had to weather a storm in the second half but they did so admirably, and crucially managed to limit the work required by Tom Heaton, something they have not done as well away from home this season.

It might now be called the Bet365 Stadium, but Burnley will hope their luck hasn’t changed at a ground where they have won six and drawn two of their 10 league visits.

To extend that record they will have to find a solution to an away record that has produced just one point and one goal from five games, with 13 shipped at the other end.

“Beyond how the game plays out it is that winning thinking, the extra bits that add up to that winning formula,” Dyche said of improving that away record.

“I don’t think we’ve delivered our side of it as well as we can do. Some of that is not down to the level of the opposition, we’ve got to add more than we’ve shown away from home, but it’s difficult, you’ve got another Premier League team out there.

“It’s been a strange conundrum, I’ve never had it as obviously so it’s hard for me to judge whether it’s the fact it’s the Premier League and everyone talks about home form in the Premier League, needing to be strong no matter who you are, so there’s some very strong home teams and then it has to be balanced out after by how are we performing, and I don’t think we’ve performed to the levels we know we can.”

While Burnley have been a force to be reckoned with at Turf Moor, they’ve struggled to replicate that form on the road.

All of their four wins have come in front of their own fans, with Liverpool and Everton beaten and Arsenal and Manchester City relieved to get away with all three points.

The Clarets have enjoyed making life tough for visiting teams, but now they have to replicate that when they are the visitors.

“The thing at home is our basic identity has been good, then we’ve mixed that, we’ve played direct against Man City, that was the game plan, we played more mixed football against Watford, mixed and well organised against Arsenal,” said Dyche.

“We’ve done that well. Even when we played 4-4-2 there were little twists that changed that. We’ve done that well at home, we’ve changed the shape and had twists on the shape.

“Away we haven’t quite glued it all together with what we’re about. Our identity in its basic form and then adding in the tactical twists and turns, that’s the next thing.”

Dyche believes getting the mindset right away from home is a ‘really important factor’.

He added: “At home, win or lose, you can clearly see that mentality is there, no matter what is happening in any given game at home, and it’s non-stop. That’s a mindset as much as anything.”