Whilst Leeds United's long-suffering fans find it easy to focus on the negative aspects of their current season, there are some things they should be grateful for.

One is the excellent youth set up at Elland Road, one which has produced the likes of Tom Pearce, Paudie O'Connor and Bailey Peacock-Farrell.

When some experienced professionals have come up short, the collection of bright young things has served the club relatively well.

Alan Hansen rather famously once said you can't win anything with kids and whilst that is correct to a degree at Leeds, they do form part of a bright future, certainly brighter than their recent history.

One who stands out in particular is Ronaldo Vieira, the 19-year-old box to box midfielder with an England U20 Toulon Tournament winners medal.

He's looking like quite a prospect, but would he be a fit for Premier League Burnley? We shine our transfer spotlight on him to find out.

A look at his stats don't reveal anything ground-breaking, but we must remember this is a 19-year old who has less than 70 first team outings to his name.

He's young, raw and has a lot to learn, but will he be better doing that amongst the country's elite teams?

Burnley play a non-possession game, they soak up pressure and hit teams on the break, meaning we're unlikely to want to look at Vieira's possession stats.

Instead, we see he makes 2.1 tackles per game. In a patient side, comfortable without the ball, this isn't a terrible stat. It would have to improve in the Premier League, but there's a willingness to put a challenge in that could be worked with.

In his 25 appearances this season he's assisted just a single goal, but that is also down to the sometimes reckless finishing ahead of him as well. He hasn't demonstrated he's a game changer just yet, but again he's at least been involved on some level.

It is when we come to his passing and success rate that we start to see the true picture. He makes 37.3 passes per game, with a 77.1% success rate. For a 19-year old I find that impressive enough to believe there's a quality midfielder in there.

Would he be a match for Burnley? We don't think so.

He needs regular game time and experience, something that would be hard to come by at Burnley and when he did get on the Turf Moor pitch he'd likely be doing lots of chasing and harassing. The big names to come out of there in recent years are defenders and keepers which tells you everything you need to know.

If he was to make a Premier League move we feel somewhere such as Huddersfield or Brighton would be the right step, somewhere with a different philosophy and approach to the game, one that would see him get on the ball more and express himself.

Wherever he does end up, there's much promise in the U20 international. Let's hope he realises it over the coming years.