NewsBeat
Brilliant Mansfield pile pressure on Parker – is his time up at Burnley?
Losing to the team 13th in English football’s third tier represents a new low in Burnley‘s season just as renewed optimism was starting to creep in.
Burnley‘s remarkable 3-2 come-from-behind win at Crystal Palace on Wednesday was their first victory in 16 Premier League games. The gloom started to lift slightly.
Parker’s side showed real fight and spirit at Selhurst Park, which made his decision to make nine changes to his team for the visit of Mansfield all the more baffling.
“When you don’t go through to the next round there will always be questions asked about that [team selection] but I don’t think that was the main factor today,” Parker told BBC Sport.
“We lacked a little something in those final moments. That was where we have fallen way short today.”
Burnley are not the first, nor will they be the last, Premier League side to ring the changes for a cup game against lower opposition.
But having been dumped out of the League Cup by Cardiff City back in September, the FA Cup was the supporters’ only chance to distract themselves from looming relegation.
“It is embarrassing, the changes he made. Play your strongest team. He made nine changes, and the second half was embarrassing,” former Burnley defender David Unsworth said on BBC Radio East Lancashire.
“It is an embarrassing afternoon for Burnley. It gives the owner a decision to make now. He has to listen to the fans, they are not happy.
“For the first time I have witnessed all home ends of the stadium booing and disgruntlement. The owner has a decision to make.”
Chairman Alan Pace, the leader of the club’s owners ALK Capital, isn’t the most popular at Turf Moor either at the moment.
This week he angered fans when, during an interview with BBC Football Focus, he dismissed fan concerns as coming from those who “just play this game on a computer somewhere”.
He went on to liken those same fans to three-year-old toddlers having a tantrum.
Pace used Saturday’s programme notes to clarify his words, writing: “I did not intend for my words to upset, but I did mean what I was trying to say which was that, just because some are upset, does not mean that things are dire and without hope.”
Many Burnley fans will be hoping Pace calls time on Parker’s spell in charge, though the former Premier League midfielder said he is confident is his own position at the club.
“I am very comfortable in my position at this present moment in time. We have lost a game of football today against a team we should be beating,” Parker told BBC Sport.
“We had numerous chances. Of course you are always going to judge a result and today is a bad one, we take the flak for that, the team and myself.”