Luton's top goalscorer bagged a brace to claim a dramatic last-gasp win against Forest Green Rovers but insists even a 30-goal season would still leave him wanting more.

Tom Craddock
For now Tom Craddock will have to make do with 13 as he capped a tremendous week to stab home in the final minute of normal time, a goal which saw them leap to third in the Conference and firmly assert promotion aspirations after Oxford, York and Kettering all faltered.
His first half penalty looked to have been cancelled out after Blue Square Premier strugglers Rovers were handed a lifeline ten minutes from time when Janos Kovacs handled in the box, but he popped up late on to spare Town's blushes.
It is a measure of the Teessider's desire that, after three goals in two games effectively won a precious six points, he is still looking to improve.
"If I had 30 I don't think I'd be happy," said the youngster afterwards.
"I'm very relieved. I think the ref let them out of jail with the penalty. Thankfully we managed to get the second goal and a vauable three points.
"We got back in the dressing room and saw the results. Although we didn't play brilliantly we'd rather be on the end of our result than some of the others scores [on the night].
"We're at the business end of the season and only results matter. If you get a good performance then all the better, but we are just staying focussed on getting positive results."
On his starring role Craddock said: "I like scoring goals and it's always pleasing to score, especially when you score the winner, it's a good feeling."
His winner, stroked home at the second attempt, saw him exhibit striker's instincts, which suggest he could have bagged more this season if he'd played more often in a central berth, instead of on the left.
"I remember seeing the ball going to Claude [Gnakpa] and he wins 99.9 per cent of his headers so I gambled on it," he said. "The keeper came out and I've just tried to get contact on it. With it being so close it didn't bounce too far away and I managed to put the rebound in."
As for the two penalties that threatened to be the story of the match, Craddock said the referee got one right and not the other, but there were no prizes for guessing which one was which.
"He tugged my arm as I ran infront of him and I think if you make contact like that in the box you're always living dangerously and the ref gave it," he said of the spot kick he won and converted, adding of the one for Rovers: "Where I was for their penalty I don't think Janos handballed it on purpose, it was more ball to hand.
"Obviously the referee has seen it differently and we couldn't do anything about it."
The striker praised his team mates' never say die attitude, saying: "Maybe you do think that sometimes it's too late but we've got a good spirit in the dressing room. We keep going and try to play football until the very end and we showed that once they got the goal back we didn't let it affect us. We tried to get the winner and thankfully we did."
His manager, Richard Money, pointed to the Kenilworth Road pitch - which had been heavily covered with sand after the recent bad weather - as a reason for the poor performance and led to sections of the crowd jeering the team.
Craddock, though, said it has improved, if only slightly.
"It's a lot better than it was against Wimbledon," he agreed. "It was very sloppy then but now it's a lot firmer as there's been quite a bit of sand put on it.
"It's still not ideal but the lads have said they prefer it sandy and harder rather than like it was against Wimbledon."