STRIKER Jonathan Obika wants to give the Swindon Town supporters one final cheer this season as they round off their campaign at home to Shrewsbury Town on Sunday.

There have been few highs for Town during a 2015-16 season which has largely been one to forget, with Swindon never really looking like matching the feats that saw them reach the League One play-off final 12 months ago.

There has been much upheaval off the pitch, with two managers – Mark Cooper and his successor Martin Ling – departing the club before the turn of the year.

That has inevitably led to inconsistency on the field and Town head into their final match 16th in the table, unable to claim a top-half finish no matter what result against the Shrews.

Obika has, however, taken consolation from the fact that Swindon are finishing their season on a positive note, with last weekend’s draw at Rochdale making it three games without defeat, and he does not want to surrender that form at the County Ground.

“It’s three unbeaten now, so I feel we need to go into the last game and make sure we enjoy it and give the fans a win,” Obika told BBC Wiltshire.

“It has been tough, for the players and for the club, with a lot of movement. We just have to go into the last game and play with our hearts and heads, and look to next season.”

Obika may have hit the back of the net in the draw at Rochdale but believes all the attention should be at the opposite end of the team after teenage goalkeeper Will Henry saved a penalty on his first-team debut.

For Obika, the performance was reminiscent of Manchester City stopper Willy Caballero, who saved three spot-kicks in their penalty shoot-out success over Liverpool in the League Cup final back in February.

“I call him Caballero because sometimes in training, we do penalties and he saves some,” added Obika.

“He kept us in the game and kept our spirits high with some fantastic saves.”