SEAN Dyche issued his response to those linking him with the vacant Cherries job, admitting: "There's nothing that I wouldn't look at."

Dyche has been out of work since being sacked by Burnley in April.

Cherries are on the lookout for a new boss, having dismissed Scott Parker last month. Gary O'Neil has been in charge on an interim basis, and looks set to keep the reins for Saturday's long trip to Newcastle United.

Since Parker's exit, Dyche has been installed as the bookmakers' favourite to take the hotseat. He is currently priced at 6-4 with Sky Bet, ahead of O'Neil (2-1), Sam Allardyce (4-1) and Kjetil Knutsen (8-1).

Asked how keen he is to get back into management, with Huddersfield Town also this week credited with interest, Dyche, speaking on the new SPORTbible Stories vodcast, said: "I'm not pushing or anything.

"I get linked, but let's face it, I'm out there, I've just come out of a job, relatively successful in the sense of years of service to a club and keeping them up.

"So I'm probably going to be linked. Not with all jobs, but I'm probably going to be linked. That's just par for the course."

Discussing links to Cherries specifically, Dyche added: "You're going to get linked with it. I was linked when I was in a job.

"So when you're out of a job when you think about it you've got, in theory, no compensation, a good record, you know what you're doing."

The 51-year-old continued: "The business side of it does kick in. Clubs are looking and then they might look at your contract, compensation. Sometimes the aggro to get through that.

"Other clubs just go 'there it is' but sometimes there's negotiation and it all gets a bit weird, a bit odd, as we've seen many times through football.

"Whereas when you're not (in work), you're available."

Asked if he would be interested in the Cherries job, Dyche, who spent 10 years at Burnley after a spell in charge of Watford, said: "There's nothing that I wouldn't look at.

"Because in my career, I didn't play in the Premier League but played loads of cup games against Premier League clubs and I played in all the other divisions.

"I managed in the Championship, the Premier League as well. I'd never disrespect any club. I've been around the game since I was 16."

Parker's exit from Cherries came after he regularly raised concerns over a lack of funds being spent following the club's promotion to the Premier League.

Discussing his approach to his relationship with club's hierarchies, Dyche said: "My belief in management, and I've always made this clear to the owners at Burnley and Watford, just tell me what I've got to manage.

"What is hard for a manager is when you get told you've got to manage this and then a month later, this comes along.

"Then the goalposts keep changing and different figures appear and you're like 'where was the structure we all agreed on'.

"Usually the best scenario in my experience is tell me what you want me to manage and I'll manage it to the best of my ability.

"Money is a big one. So just tell me that we haven't got any money and then I'll manage the best I can with no money.

"Or tell me we have got some money. The greyness is really hard for managers."