How should Burnley approach Premier League return?published at 09:59 5 June


We asked for your questions for BBC Sport pundit Nedum Onuoha on your Premier League club.
Jonathon asked Nedum what resources Scott Parker will need to keep Burnley in the top-flight.
In of squad building over the last few years, Burnley have ended up having a squad which has gone up in value by a significant amount, more so than other teams we've seen.
Maybe that continues to be the model with young players who can continue to develop and be sellable.
These players have that desire to do well and to improve, and I'd primarily give them the chance to do it.
You have the young squad they still have now - if you then decide to just invest money into older players, with the objective of just staying in the Premier League, then what happens to your medium to long-term plan in of how the football club is designed to operate?
I think you've got to create the foundation of who you are and stick to it. If you react to the results, because it's the Premier League, then I think you can lose your identity very, very quickly.
That identity, once it's lost, is a very hard thing to build back and you have to start all over again.
It sounds a bit dull if you are a Burnley fan, but stick with the process. Clubs that manage to maintain their identity, can end up doing well. Brentford, for example. They never really deviated away from the model that they have, and now they're an established Premier League side.
I think if they would have just gone up and decided to just invest in, say, players who are 28, 31, 32, the club would have changed completely. And who's to say that they'd still be in the league the way that they are now? So yeah, stick with the plan.
I think Scott Parker knows what his team's strengths and weaknesses are. He's managed in the Premier League before and has a good idea of what is required to stay up and how the players he has can perform in the style of play he wants.
I think for some of those players who were still at Burnley, who were there last time when they were in the Premier League, they want a second chance at this. They want to be able to show how good they are.
You'll probably see growth from some of those players to start with and then it's down to how Parker builds around that. I think you've got to stick with the plan of not spending lots of money on players, but then also be looking at some young players who are looking to put their mark down in the Premier League and, for the club, for their value to go up.