BURNLEY boss Sean Dyche and Swansea counterpart Paul Clement were both left flummoxed after the Clarets were awarded a bizarre spot-kick in their 3-2 defeat the Liberty Stadium.

Fernando Llorente was the Swansea hero as his stoppage-time winner secured a home victory and lifted Clement's side five points clear of the Premier League relegation zone.

But the game's main talking point centred on the 20th-minute penalty which referee Anthony Taylor awarded Burnley, even though television replays showed it was Clarets striker Sam Vokes who had handled the ball.

Clement called for the introduction of video technology over penalty decisions and revealed: "I spoke to him (Taylor) at half-time and he said he made what was, in his opinion, an honest decision. I don't think it would be any other way. It was clearly a mistake.

"I realised 30 seconds after the incident what had happened. Someone told me from the backroom staff, who were able to see it.

"I'd 100 per cent welcome it (video technology). I don't understand why it's taking so long. It's been spoken about for years and years."

Dyche was also angry with Taylor as he insisted that Llorente's winner should not have stood.

Llorente rose above Ben Mee at the far post but Dyche felt he done so illegally and said: "The one at the end is a foul. We see that given in the Premier League, to have a hand that big in your back.

"So we're coming away frustrated with a decision at the end. I thought they were the better side and we would have nicked a good point."

Burnley remain nine points clear of the bottom three and are probably two wins from safety. Yet Dyche said: "I'm more interested in the performances. If you're doing that well you'll do things right. But we weren't like we have been."

In a see-saw game, Spain striker Llorente gave Swansea a 12th-minute lead before Andre Gray's controversial penalty leveller.

Gray then fired Burnley ahead just after the hour mark but Martin Olsson equalised prior to Llorente striking for the 11th time this season.