I went to Burnley and it was the best six or seven months of my career, It was proper football”- PL legend Ian Wright makes Burnley confession as he says Clarets spell was the best of his career
The ex-Arsenal and England striker arrived at Turf Moor in February of 2000 to play under Stan Ternent.
During his brief spell, Wright helped the Clarets win promotion from the old Second Division, scoring four times in 15 appearances.
But having struggled after leaving Arsenal two years earlier, Wright was relieved he was able to end his 15-year playing career on a high note.
That, he admits, was largely down to the camaraderie and team spirit Ternent had harnessed among the Burnley squad.
Discussing his time with the club on the Stick To Football podcast, the 60-year-old said: “I went to West Ham, Nottingham Forest on loan and then Celtic, but it was when I got to Burnley with Stan Ternent, who also did some great things for me at [Crystal] Palace.
“He was the first coach that used to really sit me down, he used to draw it out what runs you’re supposed to make, why you have to hold the ball here, when you have to be the target and all this sort of stuff and he said ‘I know it’s not gone too well at Celtic, but I’ve got a good bunch of lads here and I think we can do it’.
“I went in there [Burnley] and it was the best six or seven months of my career.
“It went full circle for me because all of a sudden you’re back down to getting changed in not great changing rooms and it was really hardcore. It felt like it brought me back to Sunday League, it was proper football.
“But the thing with it was, the players and the camaraderie of that for me [was the perfect way] to end. The way it was going, I had four clubs in one season, but by the time I finished we got promotion.
“This is why I’ve got such a nice vibe with Burnley. They gave me something at the end.”
Wright was speaking on The Overlap’s Stick To Football podcast, in association with Skybet.