Lancashire

Local elections 2026
Local elections 2026

Lancashire's local elections in 2026

People living in seven parts of Lancashire will head to the polls on 7 May.

Latest Updates

  1. Burnley v Man City: Team newspublished at 18:58 BST

    BBC SPORT
1 - Dúbravka
2 - Walker, 18 - Ekdal, 12 - Humphreys, 5 - Estève, 3 - Hartman
17 - Tchaouna, 20 - Ward-Prowse, 29 - Laurent, 11 - Anthony
19 - Flemming
BURNLEY Lineup

    Burnley make three changes from the side that were beaten 4-1 at Nottingham Forest last time out.

    Bashir Humphreys, Loum Tchaouna and Josh Laurent come in for Florentino, Marcus Edwards and Lesley Ugochukwu, who all drop to the bench.

    Former Manchester City captain Kyle Walkers takes the armband for the Clarets against his old side.

    Burnley XI: Dubravka, Walker, Esteve, Ekdal, Humphreys, Hartman, Tchaouna, Ward-Prowse, Laurent, Anthony, Flemming.

    Subs: Weiss, Broja, Edwards, Foster, Florentino, Lucas Pires, Tresor, Ugochukwu, Worrall,

    Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola makes just one change following their monumental win over Arsenal on Sunday.

    Rodri fails to recover from a groin injury suffered in that game, so Rayan Ait-Nouri comes in at left-back.

    It means Nico O'Reilly is shifted further up the pitch in more familiar territory.

    Man City XI: Donnarumma, Nunes, Khusanov, Guehi, Ait-Nouri, Silva, O'Reilly, Semenyo, Doku, Cherki, Haaland.

    Subs: Trafford, Ake, Foden, Gonzalez, Kovacic, Marmoush, Savinho, Reijnders, Stones.

    BBC SPORT
25 - Donnarumma
27 - Matheus Nunes, 45 - Khusanov, 15 - Guéhi, 21 - Aït-Nouri
20 - Bernardo Silva, 33 - O'Reilly
42 - Semenyo, 10 - Cherki, 11 - Doku
9 - Haaland
MANCHESTER CITY Lineup
  2. Sutton's predictions: Burnley v Man Citypublished at 11:49 BST

    Chris Sutton smiling on a yellow and black background with 'Sutton's predictions' written below his face

    I completely understood Manchester City's celebrations at full-time on Sunday.

    Arsenal are their main rivals, there is a lot of needle between the two sides - like Erling Haaland and Gabriel for example - and they had just beaten them in a must-win game in the title race.

    Now Pep Guardiola's side will be fully focused on getting the win they need here - and I don't just think City will win at Burnley, I think they will win well.

    I know the Clarets went ahead against Nottingham Forest on Sunday but they ended up losing that one heavily.

    I can see a similar scoreline here. You just feel like City's tails will be up - they have got some tough games ahead, but this should be comfortable for them.

    Burnley will battle and they will give it a go but with what is at stake for City, and the quality they have in the final third, I am thinking they can boost their goal difference as well as collecting the three points.

    Sutton's prediction: 0-4

    Read the full predictions and have your say

  3. Burnley v Man City: Key stats and talking pointspublished at 10:58 BST

    Sophie Brown
    BBC Sport journalist

    Manchester City visit Turf Moor on Wednesday seeking a win that would take them to the top of the Premier League table - a result that would also relegate Burnley.

    The omens are not good. Burnley have won just one of their 19 Premier League games against City and have lost the past 11, which is their longest-ever losing league run against another team.

    Scott Parker's side are also winless in their past 12 home Premier League matches, the club's second-worst run without winning at Turf Moor in their league history.

    And they come into this match on the back of a 4-1 capitulation at fellow strugglers Nottingham Forest. Head coach Parker said the boos from Burnley supporters at the City Ground were justified, admitting that they "saw a team just fall away".

    That was Burnley's second-heaviest defeat of the season - topped only by the 5-1 thumping by City at Etihad Stadium in September. It could be another long 90 minutes for Clarets fans.

    A list of the clubs with the worst Premier League home form this season.

    Before City visited West Ham on 14 March, Pep Guardiola said his side's title hopes would be over if they dropped points. When they did just that in a 1-1 draw, it meant City were nine points adrift of Premier League leaders Arsenal, with one game in hand.

    If City win at Burnley, they will take over at the top of the Premier League with both they and Arsenal having just five matches left to play.

    It has been a fascinating and thrilling title run-in and there will surely be a few more twists yet before the Premier League season concludes on 24 May.

    But City's win over Arsenal on Sunday suggests Guardiola has got his team going at just the right time and when it really matters, something he has made a habit of.

    Since Mikel Arteta's first league game in charge of Arsenal in 2019, the Gunners have been top for 539 days to City's 453. Yet in that time, City have collected four Premier League titles while Arsenal have won none.

    Number of days Arsenal and Man City have spent at the top of the table this season.
  4. One win in 19 attempts - Burnley's poor Premier League record v Man Citypublished at 08:30 BST

    Two images of Scott Parker - one holding the Championship trophy, the other dejected on the touchlineImage source, Getty Images

    On 21 April 2025, Scott Parker's Burnley confirmed their promotion back to the Premier League with a 2-1 victory against Sheffield United at Turf Moor.

    One year and one day on, Parker's Clarets are on the brink of a return to the Championship.

    They have taken only 20 points from their first 33 games and a loss to Manchester City on Wednesday would confirm their relegation back into the second tier.

    The statistics of previous meetings between the two do not make good reading for Burnley followers.

    They have won just one of their 19 Premier League games against City (drawn three, lost 15) and to add to the Clarets' woes, they have lost their past 11 in a row against City - their longest ever losing run against an opponent in their league history.

    As a manager, Parker has lost all five of his Premier League matches against City by an aggregate score of 16-1.

  5. Parker on squad fitness, Man City & 'burden' of looming relegationpublished at 14:54 BST 21 April

    Nat Hayward
    BBC Sport journalist

    Media caption,

    Burnley boss Scott Parker has been speaking to the media before Wednesday's Premier League game against Manchester City at Turf Moor (20:00 BST).

    Here are the key lines from his news conference:

    • Parker confirmed Wednesday's game will come "too early" for Hannibal Mejbri and Connor Roberts, but "everyone else is fully fit".

    • Reflecting on Sunday's 4-1 defeat at Nottingham Forest: "A really disappointing result and final part to that game as well. A lot of reflection and, as always when you the results we have, it brings a certain dampness to the training facility. We rebooted well today and we're looking in a good place. In terms of the mental and psychological side of the group, today was bright."

    • Parker was asked whether the fact a defeat by City would confirm the Clarets' relegation could impact their approach: "Regarding the outcome and the situation of what it can mean is one the players have been facing for some time. Having an understanding of where we are and searching for something - I don't think that's a big player in terms of us. That has been a challenge over the last few months because we haven't managed to pick up results. That burden has been on our shoulders for a long time now. That's where we are."

    • What does he want and need to see from the players between now and the end of the season? "It comes down to what the players want as individuals. From my side, as always the driver will be that there are certain things you can control. There are certain traits and habits you can control. Not getting a result or the outcome of a performance sometimes you can accept when you fall a little bit short due to many reasons, but one thing you can never fall short on is what you are in control of. That has to be a mainstay and that will be the message."

    • On whether he can take motivation from having an impact on the title race: "I don't think so. The main thing is to have an effect on us and what we do. That challenge is there for us and is an incredible challenge. We did what we did last year to have this challenge. We are going up against the elite of the elite - that's a challenge we should be relishing."

    • On dealing with booing from supporters: "As a man I would say I am pretty fair. At the weekend I totally understand and totally deserved it because of the confusion our fans must have had was a confusion that I had as well. That frustration and the pure not understanding of it is what lives with us all, so I totally understand the booing. There have been other occasions when I have had absolutely no idea why that [booing] has been the case. There has been unrest and booing in the past that I don't really get."

    Follow all of Tuesday's Premier League news conferences and the rest of the day's football news

    Got a question about Burnley? Get in touch here and we'll seek answers from our experts

    Ask Me Anything green banner
  6. 'A club of nothingness' as relegation loomspublished at 10:39 BST 21 April

    Natalie Bromley
    Fan writer

    Burnley fan's voice banner
    Burnley players look dejected after conceding a third goalImage source, Getty Images

    No matter how the season is going, or the challenges you are trying to overcome, conceding four goals in 45 minutes is not good. Not good at all.

    We did "OK" in the first half against Nottingham Forest and Zian Flemming's opening goal was a really well-worked opportunity. I have spoken about Flemming previously and vocalised my hope that he stays with us next year, but I fear he may wish to remain in the Premier League for another season, given how well he has adapted to it.

    The second half wasn't even worth thinking about. We were second best all over the park. Our attacking threat non-existent. Our ability to string a positive or meaningful pass together laughable. And, again, Parker just seemed to lack any consistency or clear strategy in his starting line-up or his substitutions.

    It feels like we are in Gameweek 33 and he still has no idea what his best starting 11 is.

    But the most difficult part to take is that we simply crumbled so very easily. As ugly as the football was during the Sean Dyche years - and I have no desire to return to that - we had that strong jaw mentality. We gave our all. We fought for everything.

    We are so very weak as a club. A club of nothingness. With no clear identity and none of the East Lancashire grit that has run through our DNA since 1882.

    How we get that back is a concern that is monopolising my thoughts this week.

    Perhaps, I will be able to see that more clearly once relegation is confirmed after the Manchester City game on Wednesday.

    Given that City could do with winning by a large goal tally - and Burnley haven't been historically shy in gifting them 5-0 victories when they have needed it - perhaps that will be the wake-up call everyone at the club needs.

    Find more from Natalie Bromley at No Nay Never podcast, external