Wrexham supervisor Phil Parkinson is assured his aspect can show a troublesome problem for Coventry City after they meet within the FA Cup.
The Red Dragons face the Championship outfit within the third spherical having already overwhelmed Farnborough and National League rivals Oldham within the competitors to this point.
Despite the gulf between the 2 groups, with the Sky Blues taking part in three tiers above Wrexham within the soccer pyramid, Parkinson insists his aspect are usually not going to roll over.
“Obviously Coventry offer a very different challenge to what Farnborough did,” he instructed a pre-match press convention.
“The out of possession stuff is going to be really important because you’ve got to respect Coventry are going to have a lot of the ball, like we did against Farnborough.
“We’ve got to make sure we’ve got nice distance while out of possession, but equally I said to the lads when we win it back we’ve got to look to play ourselves.
“We’ve got the players capable of passing the ball, getting control of games and that’s what I’m looking forward to seeing us do.
“We’re not just going there to hang in there, we’re going there to play, we’ll work hard to obviously make it difficult and restrict space when Coventry have got the ball.
“The FA Cup is the competition when I was growing up, was probably the biggest weekend in the football calendar at the time and everyone looked forward to the FA Cup.
“That stays with you, I still feel it’s got its magic, I really do, there’s always a different feel to FA Cup games and we go there like I say with nothing to lose at all.
“We’ll play with a real freedom and enjoy the day.”
The tie is a break for Wrexham of their endeavour to safe promotion from the National League.
Their quest for promotion has been properly documented due to their Hollywood homeowners Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney and the group are presently second within the desk, two factors behind leaders Notts County.
They enter the sport in an unimaginable run of type the place they’re unbeaten within the final 15 video games throughout all competitions and Parkinson is happy with how properly his gamers have dealt with the expectations surrounding them.
He mentioned: “These lads have played under or lived with quite a lot of expectation for a while, we’ve always got the TV camera at live games, we’ve had loads of them – I’ve lost count the number of times we’ve been on TV this year.
“That’s good, we’ve enjoyed that, but I feel the group are dealing with those expectations well, playing in front of a packed house every week at home and you need certain characters to play with that expectation that are around us.
“One thing I’ve been so pleased about is even games where we’ve gone a goal behind at times, we’ve never hid away at times from taking responsibility and that’s called character.
“I’m looking forward to seeing us do that again at Coventry.”