Burnley face Manchester City on Saturday, where they will expect to see very little of the ball against a possession-dominating Pep Guardiola side - in fact, Burnley had just 23% possession in the same fixture last season.
Talking tactics, Dyche drew attention to England's 3-2 win over Spain in the Nations League, where, despite only seeing 27% of the ball, the 'Three Lions' grabbed their first victory on Spanish soil in 31 years.
Dyche remarked: "The beautiful game? No. Did we win? Get in, British bulldog, let's have a bit of that."
"If you are playing 'the right way' with possession-based football, you should have made about 275-325 passes in the first half of a game.
"We played different football. We put it long. We put it in behind. We asked questions. We used our pace.
"And the best place to use pace is where? Behind the back four. You can't use pace when you are in front of them because you've only got four yards to run in. You have got 54 yards to run in behind. That's common sense.
"The fundamental point is fans want to win. The result on Monday was quality; statistically we were annihilated. That is why you can't get drunk on stats."
The Burnley boss also rebuted criticism of Eric Dier's tackle on Sergio Ramos in the first-half, saying: "Virtually every comment was that the tackle changed the game. A tackle? Is that allowed? We have been hearing for ages that 400 passes change games.
"Who remembers the last time someone wrote about a tackle changing a game? Who knows, it might start a revolution and we will be allowed to tackle again."