

Burnley
Season Stats
Record
4W 7D 17L
H:2W/A:2W
Goals
32 / 56 (-24)
H:15/A:17
Clean Sheets
30
H:15/A:15
Rank
2
Sidelined Players (8)
Recent Results
@ Everton
Premier League · 03/03/2026
vs Brentford
Premier League · 28/02/2026
@ Chelsea
Premier League · 21/02/2026
vs Mansfield Town
FA Cup · 14/02/2026
@ Crystal Palace
Premier League · 11/02/2026
vs West Ham United
Premier League · 07/02/2026
@ Sunderland
Premier League · 02/02/2026
vs Tottenham Hotspur
Premier League · 24/01/2026
@ Liverpool
Premier League · 17/01/2026
vs Millwall
FA Cup · 10/01/2026
Upcoming Fixtures
vs AFC Bournemouth
Premier League
14/03/2026
16:00
@ Fulham
Premier League
21/03/2026
16:00
vs Brighton & Hove Albion
Premier League
11/04/2026
16:00
@ Nottingham Forest
Premier League
18/04/2026
16:00
vs Manchester City
Premier League
26/04/2026
15:00
@ Leeds United
Premier League
02/05/2026
16:00
vs Aston Villa
Premier League
09/05/2026
16:00
@ Arsenal
Premier League
17/05/2026
16:00
vs Wolverhampton Wanderers
Premier League
24/05/2026
17:00
Burnley
Burnley Football Club is one of the founding institutions of organised English football, established on 18 May 1882 from the membership of rugby team Burnley Rovers, who voted to switch codes to association football. Their first recorded match was played on 10 August 1882. The club turned professional in 1883 and was among the twelve founding members of the Football League in 1888, cementing their place in the very bedrock of the English game. They took up residence at Turf Moor in 1883 after being invited to use the ground adjacent to a local cricket club, and have called it home ever since — making it the second longest-serving football league ground in England. Turf Moor, with its current capacity of 21,944 and four stands including the Jimmy McIlroy Stand and the Bob Lord Stand, is steeped in character and history, exuding the working-class identity of this proud Lancashire town. Burnley's roll of honour is substantial for a club from a town of its size. They have been champions of England twice — in 1920–21 and 1959–60 — and won the FA Cup in 1914. They have also won the FA Charity Shield twice, in 1960 and 1973. Their 1959–60 title-winning side, featuring the legendary Jimmy McIlroy — arguably the most gifted player in the club's history — is widely regarded as one of the great English league sides of the post-war era. Burnley are one of only five clubs to have won all four professional divisions of English football, joining Wolverhampton Wanderers, Preston North End, Sheffield United and Portsmouth in that exclusive company. The manager most synonymous with their golden era is Harry Potts, who guided them to the 1960 championship. In more recent times, Sean Dyche became the defining manager of a new generation, earning back-to-back promotions, establishing the club in the Premier League, and famously finishing seventh in 2017–18 to earn European qualification — only the second time in the club's history they had qualified for European competition. The 21st century has been a tale of yo-yo fortunes for the Clarets — repeated promotion and relegation between the Premier League and the Championship — yet each time they have responded with resilience. After Vincent Kompany's brief but spectacular tenure in 2022–23, which secured the Championship title with 101 points and a breathtaking brand of attacking football, Burnley were relegated from the Premier League in 2023–24. Scott Parker was appointed in the summer of 2024 to lead the rebuild, and what followed was extraordinary. Burnley won promotion back to the top flight at the first attempt, posting a club-record 33-match unbeaten run and conceding just 16 goals in 46 Championship matches — the best defensive record in English Football League history, keeping 30 clean sheets along the way. They amassed 100 points, the first team in Football League history to reach that tally without winning the title, finishing second to Leeds United on goal difference. Notable recent players include Josh Brownhill, James Trafford — sold to Manchester City for £31 million in 2025, becoming the most expensive British goalkeeper in history — and the forward Lyle Foster. Burnley's story is one of enduring pride, community identity, and an indomitable refusal to be written off.