WREXHAM will arrive at York City tomorrow afternoon suffering their longest run without a victory for more than seven years.

The Dragons are win-less in seven matches, taking just two points from a possible 21 and, despite sitting in 12th place, are still not mathematically safe from relegation.

Six points separates Wrexham from the bottom four with three games left to play and the Racecourse Ground club have only managed one clean sheet from their last 14 outings.

At the other end of the pitch, meanwhile, the former European Cup Winner’s Cup quarter-finalists are looking to last season’s on-loan City striker Ntumba Massanka for inspiration.

Massanka, who only managed three outings for the Minstermen including two as a substitute during an underwhelming one-month switch from Burnley, also failed to net during 11 outings from the bench when he spent the first half of the season with Morecambe.

His latest spell away from Turf Moor has proven more fruitful, though, with four goals from 14 appearances for the 20-year-old attacker.

With John Rooney (11 goals), Gerry McDonagh (five) and Shaun Harrad (four) now plying their respective trades at Guiseley, Cambridge United and Torquay, that makes Massanka is the leading scorer left on the Robins’ books, along with former Stirling Albion striker Jordan White.

One-time England under-21 marksman and Championship performer Izale McLeod is another option in attack, but he only has one goal to his name in 14 matches since his transfer from Corby Town in January and Wrexham are the division’s second-lowest scorers with 43 league goals.

Only relegation certainties North Ferriby, with 36, have managed fewer.

Former City skipper Russell Penn, meanwhile, is set to patrol the visitors’ midfield.

The 31-year-old midfielder has started 12 games since moving to North Wales in mid-January and is in his second loan spell of the season, having also been shipped out to Gateshead in September following his summer switch from Bootham Crescent to Carlisle.

But Wrexham are set to be without skipper Rob Evans, who was injured in Good Friday’s 3-1 home defeat to Maidstone.

Ollie Shenton, who replaced him in the first half, is poised to deputise.

Ex-Walsall, Peterborough and Wrexham midfielder Dean Keates, in his first managerial job at the age of 38, will be hoping to improve his win ratio of 33 per cent against his predecessor Gary Mills, who managed to come out on top in 40.6 per cent of his matches at the Dragons’ helm.

Wrexham (probable): Jalal, Carrington, Marx, Riley, Jennings, Shenton, Penn, Barry, Rutherford, White, Massanka.