LEAMINGTON must be sick of the sight of Worcester City.

As if having to watch their rivals receive a heroes' welcome following the FA Cup giant-killing of Coventry City wasn’t bad enough, the Brakes have now failed to beat Carl Heeley’s side in any of the four meetings between the teams in the last month.

City already had the bragging rights after dumping Leamington out of the cup via a replay, and then went on to rub their noses in it by securing a late Conference North draw at the New Windmill just a week before the Coventry clash.

Saturday’s victory at Aggborough must have been the final straw for Leamington, although the joke afterwards was that the clubs will probably meet again when the FA Trophy third qualifying round draw is made today.

Not that City will much care. Nor should they.

The Blue and Whites are riding the crest of a wave at the moment and can seemingly do no wrong.

This latest success stretched their unbeaten run in all competitions to 10 games, seven which have resulted in victory.

It is a remarkable sequence and one which never looked in danger of being ended at Aggborough, where City are yet taste defeat this season.

While they left it late, with both goals arriving inside the last 14 minutes, and conceded a cheap consolation, three points were fully merited.

That victory came after one of the most memorable weeks in the club’s history just made it all the sweeter.

It would have been easy for City to have been flat after such a momentous occasion at the Ricoh Arena, drained by the emotion of it all.

Yet they were anything but, even if the crowd didn’t top the hoped-for 1,000 and was lower than the Greenwich match.

A few excellent George Williams bursts down the right and Graham Hutchison heading off the line from Stefan Moore apart, the first-half was somewhat tame.

But the action got going after the break and the introduction of Jordan Murphy and Tristan Dunkley saw the hosts take the game by the scruff of the neck.

Within 12 minutes of their arrival City were in front, Nick Wright getting his head to Ellis Deeney’s inswinging corner and helping the ball past Mats Morch via a deflection.

The second goal arrived five minutes later and was straight off the training ground. Sean Geddes and captain Deeney took it in turn to run round the ball, causing the wall to part, before the former whipped the ball in and centre-half Hutchison showed the deft touch of a striker to flick it home.

Poor marking allowed Danny Newton to head Stephan Morley’s 89th-minute free-kick beyond Nathan Vaughan, but it was too little too late.