Exeter City striker Jayden Wareham has "got more to give" after scoring the fastest hat-trick in the club's history.
The 22-year-old scored three goals in eight second-half minutes to put City 3-1 up at Peterborough before the Grecians were pegged back in a 3-3 draw.
The goals took Wareham's tally to 17 in his debut season at Exeter after his summer move from Reading.
But despite his great form, City assistant manager Kevin Nicholson says Wareham can be even better.
"If I'm being honest, I think he's got more to give, genuinely," Nicholson told BBC Radio Devon.
"He scored three brilliant goals and he had another chance where he should have probably scored another.
"He could easily have had five goals today, but his overall game wasn't of the level that it's been in some games.
"He puts himself about, he presses hard at the front, he's our first defender and he does that well.
"But I think he could have been tidier, more proactive rather than reactive when we did have to play the ball forward, I thought he gave too many fouls away and he was offside too much.
"So that in itself is a compliment for a guy that's just got a hat-trick and will probably get top marks in the paper and all the rest of it.
"There's so much more that he can do, so much more he can give and I think off the back of that a lot of clubs are going to be looking at him and I have no doubt in the near future he'll be having an opportunity to play at a really, really high level."
Nicholson was keen to praise the way his side played when they overran Peterborough after half-time.
Wareham's goals capped off what Nicholson felt was among the most memorable play he has seen in his time as a coach.
"The 15 minutes from half-time to when Jayden completes his hat-trick was one of the best 15 minutes of football I've been privileged to watch and be part of," Nicholson added.
"I thought it was outstanding. It was incisive, it was decisive, it was ruthless, it was fast, it was everything that you'd want your team to be.
"But it was also simple, it wasn't stepovers and rainbow flicks and all that kind of stuff - it was just really, really simple football done really, really well at pace and the goals were outstanding."