Manqana, who won the man of the match award, attributes his side's 6-0
victory against Ajax Cape Town at Orlando Stadium on Saturday to "great
teamwork".
He crowned his superb evening with two great goals as Arrows won their first major cup final.
"I have been with Arrows a while and I have never seen the players fighting like they did during the game against Ajax," Manqana said, according to Kickoff.com.
"We worked hard and fought together as a team for the whole 90 minutes. I believe that even if they had added another 90 minutes, Ajax were not going to come back and we would have continued to score more goals.
"This is one of the greatest moments in my soccer career. It was also my first man of the match award in the PSL.
"I want to thank my team-mates for achieving what we have been wishing for for a long time. The cup also means a lot to the people of KwaZulu-Natal, who deserve to celebrate and enjoy our achievement."
Even though Abafana Bes'thende boss Mato Madlala is reported to have promised to give her players R4-million to share for the win, Manqana told KickOff.com that winning the cup was "worth more than money".
"I don't know anything about the money promised to us, but for me money doesn't mean anything. The trophy is what counts. I will treasure this medal for the rest of my life."
Peter Pedroncelli, Goal.com
He crowned his superb evening with two great goals as Arrows won their first major cup final.
"I have been with Arrows a while and I have never seen the players fighting like they did during the game against Ajax," Manqana said, according to Kickoff.com.
"We worked hard and fought together as a team for the whole 90 minutes. I believe that even if they had added another 90 minutes, Ajax were not going to come back and we would have continued to score more goals.
"This is one of the greatest moments in my soccer career. It was also my first man of the match award in the PSL.
"I want to thank my team-mates for achieving what we have been wishing for for a long time. The cup also means a lot to the people of KwaZulu-Natal, who deserve to celebrate and enjoy our achievement."
Even though Abafana Bes'thende boss Mato Madlala is reported to have promised to give her players R4-million to share for the win, Manqana told KickOff.com that winning the cup was "worth more than money".
"I don't know anything about the money promised to us, but for me money doesn't mean anything. The trophy is what counts. I will treasure this medal for the rest of my life."
Peter Pedroncelli, Goal.com
