IF BURNLEY needed any encouragement for achieving a first league double over Liverpool in 87 years they could look to the Nou Camp on Wednesday night and Barcelona's miracle comeback against Paris Saint-Germain.

Like Barca overturning PSG's 4-0 first leg deficit, and then scoring three times in the final seven minutes, few people will give the Clarets a hope at Anfield tomorrow (4pm).

Not only is history against Burnley but so is their away record - they remain winless on the road in 15 league and cup games this term.

Sean Dyche described Barcelona's astonishing victory as the 'beauty of football' - not that he saw any of it.

"I was watching my lad play for Northampton at Leicester and looking at my phone thinking 'nah', and then boom. 'Son, you ain't going to believe this!'," he said.

But for a template on how to beat Jurgen Klopp's side Burnley only need to cast their minds back to the second weekend of the season, when they won 2-0 at Turf Moor.

Despite seeing less than 20 per cent of the ball the Clarets created the better chances, with most of Liverpool's 26 shots coming from distance, and although Klopp appears to be still scratching his head and wondering how the Reds lost that game, Dyche doesn't expect his team to have a psychological advantage as a result of that victory.

"Both teams have moved on in different ways," he said.

"They're a very good side. They've had a few ups and downs, but we're a team who were considered to have no chance, to be where we are, it's more about the whole season."

Where Burnley are is 12th in the Premier League despite that away record.

A run of four successive away games has brought more questions about the riddle of Burnley's home record against their difficulties on the road, but Dyche is focusing on the bigger picture, which sees the Clarets with a nine-point advantage of the bottom three.

"We know the reality of this league, it's difficult going on the road anywhere in this league," he said. Leicester still haven't won, and they won the league last year. Enough said.

"It's not just Burnley, but we're weirdly the big story.

"It's tough going away, literally, all managers will tell you that, and going to Liverpool is slightly tougher because of the nature of it.

"For all the weekly event of a game, bi-weekly, we're all about the bigger picture, it's about taking each game as it comes, taking on the challenge, giving your all, making sense of it and moving forward very quickly."

Of the win at Turf Moor in the early knockings of the campaign, Dyche added: "It was massive at the time and still is. There’s a lot of made of four away fixtures but we got three points from the reverse fixture.

"Getting your first win is a big thing and the feeling that went with it. There still one of the superpower sides.

"They’ve had some bumps on the road but on their day they’re a fantastic side. On that day we delivered a different kind of performance to get a win.

"They were still excellent on the day, they had a lot of efforts, they tended to be longer efforts and not necessarily true goalscoring moments, but some of their play was excellent and some of the tempo of their play in and out of possession was very good."