WORCESTER City assistant boss Ashley Vincent saw some potential in the performances of winger James Baldwin and the re-signed James Lemon.

Baldwin created a string of chances in Saturday's 1-1 Midland League Premier Division home draw with basement boys Wolverhampton Sporting Community.

And forward Lemon impressed Vincent as a substitute after rejoining the club following a prolific spell with West Midlands League Division One side Droitwich Spa.

Vincent said: "James Baldwin was fantastic again, creating chances at will. We have to take more of them.

"James Lemon has been here before. The gaffer (John Snape) and the chairman (Steve Goode) know him. We've been speaking about him for a few weeks.

"He was meant to play his last game for Droitwich on Saturday but it got called off and he was signed with us ready to go forward so we brought him in on the bench.

"He's a good option. I hadn't seen him play before and he was fantastic. He held the ball up really well and is a good size. He ran in behind and chased down too.

"For a cameo he was quite eye-catching for me. We're hoping to get more minutes into him on Tuesday (at Studley in the League Cup) and unleash him. We have not been scoring enough."

City's lack of a clinical edge proved costly with only one opportunity put away by Jordan Harrison.

Vincent continued: "We weren't clinical. I can remember probably at least 10 times that we were in goal-scoring positions when we've hit the man or they've blocked it.

"We need a bit more composure in those situations. I'm asking them to just pass it in the corner.

"With the pressure and the chances we've had, we should have been three-up at half-time minimum.

"Then we should probably go and get two or three in the second half but we didn't.

"I warned the players at half-time that if Wolverhampton are in the game at 1-0 after 80 minutes they will see that as a victory.

"You could see they were slowing it down from the start, that was their game-plan and that's fine.

"What I expect then is a bit of a sensible head and coolness in your mind in the sense of knowing what the conditions are.

"Even if it's not pretty the ball goes out of the stadium. But we get caught and then they shut out the game.

"Probably in the end their tails are up, they break and flash a few balls past our post. If you don't get it right on another day you end up losing.

"We're bitterly disappointed.

"When they're not clinical enough I expect them to be careful and keep the ball as far away from our goal as possible.

"In that situation we were comfortable and creating chances. We were waiting for one to be taken.

"But you can only be so comfortable in football. While you're winning 1-0 the other team is still in the game.

"On Saturday it was about playing football in the right errors. We did that for 95 per cent of the game but the five per cent is the one that catches up on you.

"We want young players to progress and to help them along their way but we need them to learn quickly."