BURNLEY have to continue the road to recovery at Cardiff this weekend.

The Clarets got back on track with their record Premier League win last Saturday, beating Bournemouth 4-0 to end a run four consecutive defeats and move off the bottom of the table.

Sean Dyche insists that success over the Cherries is only a 'start' in changing the story around the club, but their two fixtures before October's international break hand his side the chance to accelerate that process of recovery.

Burnley are at the Cardiff City Stadium on Sunday (4pm) with the Bluebirds currently 19th in the table, before welcoming bottom side Huddersfield Town to Turf Moor next Saturday.

Dyche insists his team will alter their script this season but he's adamant that Burnley won't be concerning themselves with what any outside of the club thinks of them.

"We’ve made a good start, we will change our story, that’s what we look to do," he said.

"We don’t rely on everyone else, we don’t worry too much about what anyone else thinks of us.

"It’s a start. We expect a lot of ourselves."

Dyche believes his side showed signs of responding to being written off in some quarters last weekend, using the struggle many of them have had to reach the Premier League as a weapon to fight off their slow start.

"From a very young age, to get to where they’ve got to, these lads have delivered a lot in their careers," the Clarets chief said.

"They’ve had a lot of knocks along the way, I reminded them of that, but they’re still here, they’re still in the Premier League.

"That’s to fight for, to say ‘everyone is knocking me again, I’ve had it all my life, so let’s go and fight for it as a club’. I thought there was a bit of that last weekend."

The thumping win over Bournemouth saw confidence gradually return to the Burnley ranks, a missing trait identified by goalscorer Matej Vydra before the first three points of the season.

But Dyche believes the slump was down to more than a simple lack of belief, heading into business jargon to try and explain the difficulties Burnley have had early in the season in rediscovering their mojo after last season's achievements.

"It’s not always about confidence. A success hangover is well used in business," he said.

"People are striving, they get to a certain point and then it gets a bit confusing.

"The club were well recognised last year, they finished seventh in the Premier League, that’s a really high achievement for a club like Burnley.

"But that can bring a bit confusing, everyone as individuals and a collective are thinking ‘where are we at?’

"The demands change, the fans change, the noise from the media change. That takes some adjusting, then you add in the complications from the Europa League and the physical side of it that makes it even tougher.

"That’s why it’s a start, it’s not a finish. It reminds us we’re capable, we have to fight, we have to play and do everything we do to win games."