WHAT do you get when you cross a team that hasn't won in 10 league games and a team that has lost the last five?

The answer lay at Turf Moor on Saturday where two teams went head to head desperate to get a result.

With that in mind, perhaps a draw was inevitable. In the end, it was certainly warranted.

From Sheffield Wednesday's point of view, it was a welcome point after failing to pick up any from a possible 12 in the league before their trip to Turf Moor.

From Burnley's perspective, there was more to the game than the result, although they will hope to quickly turn one into three.

In the build-up to Saturday, manager Steve Cotterill had talked about the squad he was building and looking to the future, so it was fitting, then, that the club played their part in a local project with Better Burnley Day'.

For not only did the line-up boast six internationals, including Icelandic midfielder Joey Gudjonsson and Scotland defender Steven Caldwell, who was made captain on his home debut, the Clarets also welcomed back Andy Gray into the starting line-up for the first time since suffering a broken metatarsal in late November.

That game against Leeds was the last time Burnley recorded three points with a 2-1 win, in which Gray scored.

It would have been easy to expect instant success on his return after the 10-goal impact he made before his untimely injury.

But Gray's comeback, allied with Ade Akinbiyi's bid for peak match fitness, is being carefully monitored and nurtured.

Akinbiyi's running during games has been the subject of much debate as the striker himself felt that, since re-signing from Sheffield United in January, he hadn't done enough. But there were improvements in that department on Saturday, in what was only Burnley's second home game this calendar year.

And the former Stoke striker might have put the Clarets into an early lead had he managed to match the direction of his header with power as he met Steve Jones' delivery inside the six-yard box.

Jones then had space to shoot himself but took his eye off the