Also said he was recovering well and would also be interested in an extended contract with Burnley.
Get your eggs & toast ready Sean

So let's have a list of midfielders since 1977 /8, who are better?PLTMGMBJ wrote:I know I'm in a minority but I'm not a Defour uber fan. He's okay and has improved on last season but he's not all that .....................
... he's nothing special and certainly not the best midfielder we've had in the past 40 years, let alone our halcyon years. I wouldn't be that bothered if he left.
I AM a Defour fan BUT I'd agree that in most other PL teams he'd struggle to be dominant and could we'll find himself well down the pecking order.PLTMGMBJ wrote:I know I'm in a minority but I'm not a Defour uber fan. He's okay and has improved on last season but he's not all that. I've seen better. If he wants to face a fresh challenge then fair enough but that is fraught with danger. He may find himself down the pecking order. When he's faced with a truly outstanding midfield competition of the ilk of De Bruyne in his national team, he's got to just realise he's a decent player who'll never reach his potential. I'm not knocking the guy, he's steady as you go but he's nothing special and certainly not the best midfielder we've had in the past 40 years, let alone our halcyon years. I wouldn't be that bothered if he left.
I would hardly call West Ham a bigger stage, other than being a London club and having a big stadium that the fans don't like. Their history of success is similar to ours apart from they won the old UEFA (or was it Fairs at the time) cup but they have never been English Champions. West Ham are and always have been a nothing club with decent support due to having a catchment area numbering in millions not 10s of thousands.claretspice wrote:Realistically if either of them really wants him, he's likely to go. Defour has never really hidden the fact that (entirely understandably) he'd like either a bigger stage than Burnley before he retires, or he'd eventually look to a bigger pay day.
That's really the price of success - its why you need to make sure you keep a core of unsung heroes - Mee, Heaton, Arfield, Vokes etc. - who provide continuity, and then slot in the stars who are by nature more transient around them.
To anyone outside of Burnley, they are a bigger club. I agree with all you say about their history, but they are a bigger stage. They get more than twice our home gates (and more than twice whatever we can realistically expect our home gates to be).houseboy wrote:I would hardly call West Ham a bigger stage, other than being a London club and having a big stadium that the fans don't like. Their history of success is similar to ours apart from they won the old UEFA (or was it Fairs at the time) cup but they have never been English Champions. West Ham are and always have been a nothing club with decent support due to having a catchment area numbering in millions not 10s of thousands.
Everton are a different proposition but they never really trouble the big six. The only thing taking him to either of these clubs before his retirement would be money and remember we may well have the additional pull of European football next season, which would be an even bigger stage than either of the above could provide.
If we are to show a real commitment to future success and ambition I think we must pull out all the stops to make sure Defour stays because, to be fare, he is simply the highest quality player we have. If it came down to a choice I would rather lose Vokes, Arfield and (given Pope) Heaton than lose Defour.
Not sure I agree with your point above, Dyche spent time under the great Brian Clough. I think we are still on a journey that could lead us to much better things than you can imagine.claretspice wrote:....Seventh in the Premier League with a decent cup run here and there is as good as it can ever get for us. ....
Did he? I thought the Asian team pulled out of a deal because they couldn't pay the fee.Belgianclaret wrote:Also don't underestimate the fact that Defour chose Burnley over a far better financial offer, and has also indicated he enjoys playing for Burnley.
If that happens, fantastic, but none of us can assume or expect it will happen. Seventh with the odd cup run is the best we can ever reasonably hope for, and perhaps more than we can expect. My point is that anyone thinking we should built a recruitment and retention strategy on being more than that is kidding themselves.No Ney Never wrote:Not sure I agree with your point above, Dyche spent time under the great Brian Clough. I think we are still on a journey that could lead us to much better things than you can imagine.
Realistically, since the top six have become so entrenched in the Premier League can any other club, including West Ham or Everton, reasonably expect to do much better than 7th and the odd cup run, unless they have major investment?claretspice wrote:If that happens, fantastic, but none of us can assume or expect it will happen. Seventh with the odd cup run is the best we can ever reasonably hope for, and perhaps more than we can expect. My point is that anyone thinking we should built a recruitment and retention strategy on being more than that is kidding themselves.
If Defour wants to stay, fabulous. But we're all better off assuming that talents of his ilk will have bigger horizons than Burnley.
West Ham and Everton have a significantly better chance than we do of breaking in, but in any event they can pay players a vast amount more and they are in any event a bigger stage. That's just a fact.Spijed wrote:Realistically, since the top six have become so entrenched in the Premier League can any other club, including West Ham or Everton, reasonably expect to do much better than 7th and the odd cup run, unless they have major investment?
Bradys not bad....DCWat wrote:Always will be a selling club. The day that bigger fish aren’t looking at our players is when we really need to be worrying.
If Defour were to go, and I really hope that this isn’t the case, we would need a lot more than a midfield of Cork Hendrick and Westwood, for a full season.
Not surprisingly, your assumption is wrongKRBFC wrote:Did he? I thought the Asian team pulled out of a deal because they couldn't pay the fee.
Brady, Lennon and JBG are all decent but I wouldn’t want any in the centre of midfield.tim_noone wrote:Bradys not bad....
I guess it depends on how reliable your source is, I'm just recycling what was reported at the time. I know the Burnley Express ran a story saying Defour favoured a move to Qatar due to the finances on offer. You have ''Belgian'' in your username which makes you a know it all on all things Belgium though.......Belgianclaret wrote:Not surprisingly, your assumption is wrong
Absolutely and Arsenal keep looking over their shoulder. 6th, though unlikely, is not impossible.No Ney Never wrote:Not sure I agree with your point above, Dyche spent time under the great Brian Clough. I think we are still on a journey that could lead us to much better things than you can imagine.