The lower leagues are full of players desperate to make the step up to the Championship, or even the Premier League.

Every young starlet that emerges with a few goals and a turn of pace is dubbed 'the next Jamie Vardy'. Any team that can identify and pluck that player from nowhere is sure to benefit.

Whilst Leeds are in recovery at present, the lack of genuine attacking options has concerned some fans.

Samu Saiz's return has sections of the support hoping for a late promotion surge, the reality of the situation is that it may be a year too early for the Whites. The squad isn't quite there, but with a couple of useful additions, it could be.

At all levels you find sides willing to take a punt on a player from a lower division and this summer, Cheltenham Town boss Gary Johnson gambled on little-known Greenwich Borough striker Mo Eisa.

He was plying his trade at step eight of the Football League system and doing rather well too.

His CV boasted 57 goals in a century of appearances and that sort of record opens doors, specifically the one leading to the Whaddon Road changing rooms.

From there it could have gone one of two ways. Eisa arrives, fails to hold down a first team place and finds himself on loan at Dover before too long, or he comes in and gets a chance and never looks back.

Luckily for him, the latter has happened. He smashed four goals in his first three games and is currently on 18 in all competitions, a better average than he showed three divisions lower. He is the success story of League Two, a menace and a terror to opposition defences.

Eisa has a little bit of everything, he has devastating pace which can be used to get in behind, but he's also resilient on the ball. Most of all, he has an eye for goal, that special something that you can't coach or teach.

He's a natural, a real danger with the ball at his feet around the eighteen yard area. If he can step up so effortlessly once, why not again?

Leeds need a striker and with the funds at their disposal, Eisa would be small change. £100,000 combined with a couple of lucrative clauses would perhaps be too much for Cheltenham to resist, but what could he be worth in two years time? As well as his increasing value, how valuable could his goals be at Leeds United?

Quite often it is folly to pay a few million pounds for a striker from elsewhere when the available talent is just waiting in League Two to be discovered and in truth it would be a double win situation for Leeds.

If he didn't make the grade he could easily be loaned back to League Two to develop, if he did he could score the goals to fire them to the promised land.