ANOTHER match, another victory for Worcester City.

Success at Harrogate Town was their seventh in their last nine games with four in Conference North.

Coupled with their FA Cup run, Carl Heeley’s side are unbeaten in 11 games and can seemingly do no wrong.

The latest win came courtesy of two goals from second-half substitute Daniel Nti and another sublime effort from the boot of two-goal cup hero Sean Geddes.

It wasn’t their best display, particularly in the first-half, but a three-goal victory away from home, and a clean sheet, is impressive nonetheless.

Confidence is sky-high among the players and they must feel unbeatable.

With their date with destiny at Scunthorpe United just two weeks away, competition for places is also fierce.

Nti was left out at Harrogate but seized his opportunity off the bench and is now top scorer with seven goals.

He put City ahead in the 65th minute, turning on the edge of the box with virtually his first touch before firing confidently past Phil Barnes.

Geddes’ goal 14 minutes later was superb, curling the ball delightfully into the top corner beyond the keeper.

Nti despatched the third from inside the box with time almost up. By the end, City were toying with Harrogate and passing the ball without a care in the world.

However, it took them a while to get going at Wetherby Road. Had it not been for Nathan Vaughan, the visitors would have been behind before the break.

The ex-Kidderminster keeper, whose displays have gone up a notch since his penalty save at Coventry, enjoyed another good day at the office to deny Harrogate.

Lewis Turner, Jake Speight and captain David McGurk were all thwarted in the first-half, the latter from point-blank range after the ball had taken a wicked deflection.

It also looked as though the gamble to leave out captain Ellis Deeney and Danny Jackman would backfire.

Deeney has four bookings this season and collecting a fifth, which would have ruled him out of the Scunthorpe clash, was a risk Heeley wasn’t prepared to take.

Jackman was rested but called into action three minutes before half-time to replace the injured Jacob Rowe.

But it was a blessing in disguise as the makeshift midfield pairing of Graham Hutchison and Connor Gater wasn’t working.

When Jackman came on, Hutchison slotted in alongside stand-in skipper Wayne Thomas and City began to look like their usual selves.

Thomas had been instrumental in keeping the visitors together in the first period and continued to dominate the Harrogate forwards.

His presence, together with a recognised balance to the team, was a calming influence and City prospered.

Nti’s arrival added an extra spark and after that there was only one winner.