SEAN Dyche was pleased to make two new additions to his squad on deadline day after revealing he found out the club record deal for Robbie Brady was done over the tannoy along with the rest of Turf Moor.

The Clarets announced the £13million deal for the Republic of Ireland international just seconds after the half-time whistle had blown in the 1-0 Premier League win over Leicester City.

The 25-year-old became the second Burnley on deadline day, following the £5million capture of Aston Villa midfielder Ashley Westwood.

Dyche, who said one of his staff alerted him to the Brady tannoy announcement as he headed off the pitch, said: “We were still waiting (before kick-off). When it got announced it literally must have been done then because I was still waiting for the agreements to come through.

“I think both players can add to what we do. First things first they know the demands I put on players here to get in the team, so that’s their first job, to earn the right to do that.”

The Clarets had to wait to complete the Brady deal, with Norwich City keen to get replacements in before sanctioning the move.

"He's got experience, and he can play in probably three different positions, so we'll see what he adds in that respect,” Dyche said as Burnley broke their transfer record for the third time in less than six months.

On the addition of Westwood, the Clarets chief added: "Westy is slightly different, he's had a tough run at Villa and we want to give him a new platform to grow from.

"He's only 26, 140-odd games in the Premier League, so he knows a bit about it, and he'll fit into the group well.”

Dyche revealed the season-ending injury picked up by Dean Marney had affected the decision to move for Westwood, who was a Burnley target during the summer transfer window.

And with Joey Barton facing a possible Football Association charge for betting offences and Steven Defour limping off with a hamstring injury during the win over Leicester, Westwood provides vital midfield cover.

On Defour's injury Dyche added: "It's not too bad I don't think, he sort of walked off, so hopefully that will settle down quickly."

To round off an ideal day Burnley moved up to ninth in the Premier League with a 1-0 win over champions Leicester, secured with Sam Vokes 87th minute strike.

And Dyche was pleased with side's performance in the win.

“It’s been an interesting few days for many different reasons, it culminates in a fine and deserved win,” said the Clarets chief.

“They’re (Leicester) still a very good side, they’re good on the counter, they work on transitions, they’ve got pace. They defend very deep and make it difficult for you to break them down.

“Over the 90 minutes we kept knocking on their door and eventually we got the moment of truth.

"We had several others before that, not golden chances but good chances, we worked their keeper, our shape was really good and the endeavour is never in question.

“The way we kept going and going and got the goal in the end was fantastic for the group, not just the 11 out there but everyone involved.”

Replays showed the ball had hit Vokes’ hand before his late winner, but Dyche felt it was payback for a raft of decisions that had gone against his side recently, and praised referee Mike Dean for not awarding a penalty when Jamie Vardy went down under Tom Heaton’s challenge.

“We’ve had some hits go against us and some decisions that have meant a lot, that have meant a change in the outcome. I think it comes off his stomach first before it hits his arm,” Dyche said of Vokes' goal.

“The referee got questioned but what a fantastic bit of referring with Jamie Vardy. His leg goes out into an unnatural position. I’ve seen it back. It’s fantastic to see through that and not give a penalty. I commend him on that, because that’s not easy to do.”