Clarets hero Andy Cooke celebrated pulling another FA Cup cracker after the club's epic third round victory and said: "We can do it again!"

The striker whose goal earned magnificent Burnley a shock at Derby County on Saturday is relishing another tie against Premiership opposition after the club was handed a trip to Coventry on January 8, in yesterday's fourth round draw.

The Clarets pulled off arguably the result of the round thanks to Cooke's 62-minute goal in front of nearly 5,000 Burnley fans at Pride Park.

He said: "A lot people wanted a home tie or to play Blackburn but I think it's a great draw and another day to look forward to.

"We've got nothing to worry about. We will look forward to it and just hopefully pull off another result like we did on Saturday. There's no reason why we can't.

"It's just brilliant because as a player that's where you want to play, against Premiership teams like that, and I don't think we looked out of place on Saturday."

Second Division promotion-chasers Burnley rose to the occasion to outplay Derby and deserve their moment of triumph.

"It was a great day, not just because I scored the goal, but for the team, the fans and everyone. Days like that don't happen very often so you've got to enjoy it," added Cooke. "Even before the start and through the week in training it hadn't been discussed that we would get beaten.

"I thought that showed with the way the lads started and the way we played.

"I've never known us start a game that brightly and maybe the day brought the best out of people.

"I thought we were unlucky not to not score in the first half and I had a couple of chances which I snatched at.

"But I thought if we weren't going to score I couldn't see them getting one either.

"And it was a great feeling to get that chance. I had to make up a bit of ground to get in a good jump but as soon as Gordon put the cross in I knew I was going to get on the end of it.

"When it went in the ground went so quiet at that end I thought it might have been disallowed."

While Derby's fans were stunned, Burnley's travelling supporters were able to celebrate the goal and then a famous win half-an-hour later as the Clarets' superb defence stood firm. "It was funny," Cooke said. "You think you're going to be hanging on but I don't think we were. It looked as though they couldn't break down our defence."

The 25-year-old striker has scored important goals before, notably the two that kept Burnley in the Second Division on the last day of the 1997/98 season.

"It was a great feeling to score on Saturday but that and the Plymouth game were two totally different occasions, so you can't compare them," he said.

"It's just great to score in a big game. That's what I want to do. I want to score in every game but of course it doesn't work out like that."

See also Clarets section in Sport

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