Norwich City striker Mohamed Toure insisted he was just "happy to help the team" after becoming an instant hero with a hat-trick on his first start for the Canaries.
The Australia international was brought in from Danish club Randers on transfer deadline day for a fee believed to be around £2.6m.
He followed up his debut goal off the bench against Blackburn on Saturday with all three as they made it back-to-back wins at Oxford United, moving them up to 16th in the Championship, seven points clear of the relegation places.
"It's a crazy start and hopefully we can keep it going," the 21-year-old told BBC Radio Norfolk.
"The gaffer had our tactics and one of them was the hit them hard from the start and kill their momentum a bit.
"As a striker, the best thing is to get the chances and then it's up to you to put them away. My first two games I'm getting a lot of chances and I'm happy to be helping the team."
- Mohamed Toure: ‘My job is to score goals’ (BBC Radio Norfolk)
Toure – who had not played for Randers since 7 December – did not have long to think about the move to Norfolk after hearing that the Canaries were interested in signing him.
"It was late, but as soon as I talked to the coach and the team and I knew this would be the right project for me. Since I came here I haven't regretted it at all," he added.
"It's very physical and I'm still trying to adapt and get better.
"It's been one of my dreams for a long time, coming to England to play football and I didn't expect to be at such a big club so quick. Now I'm here at Norwich and I just want to enjoy every moment."
Following the game at Oxford, head coach Philippe Clement said it was important to have a striker who was "lethal" in front of goal and described Toure as "a young lad with a lot of potential and several things to improve".
There was pressure on the 21-year-old to hit the ground running, with top scorer Jovon Makama currently injured and Josh Sargent out of favour after opting out of last month’s FA Cup tie against Walsall because of ongoing transfer speculation.
"I've had a lot of one to one chats with the gaffer, he sat me down and he broke it down a bit for me to understand," said Toure.
"He's very clear in what he wants you to do. It's amazing, you see all the boys improving week in week out and I know the more I stay under him the better I'll get.
"Coming into this environment was easy, we have a very good changing room, a very good group of boys and when everything off the pitch is so easy, it becomes easier on the pitch."
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