‘Relaxed’ Cape Town does the trick for PSL star Manyama

Footballer of the Season Lebogang Manyama at the PSL awards in Sandton. Photo: Muzi Ntombela, BackpagePix

Footballer of the Season Lebogang Manyama at the PSL awards in Sandton. Photo: Muzi Ntombela, BackpagePix

Published Jul 12, 2017

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JOHANNESBURG - Being away from the glitz and glamour of Johannesburg has contributed massively to Lebogang Manyama’s accomplishment.

It was Manyama’s night at the Premier Soccer League (PSL) on Monday at the Sandton Convention Centre.

The Cape Town City striker walked away with the big one, the PSL Footballer of the Season prize, as well as the Players’ Player of the Season and the Golden Boot awards.

The lad from Tembisa was rewarded with R425 000. The Footballer of the Season award is worth R250 000 and the Players’ Player is rewarded with prize-money of R150 000. In addition, there is a R25 000 payday for his 13 strikes.

Speaking after the awards, Manyama attributed his triumph to “the boring life of Cape Town”.

“There’s nothing with me and Cape Town. It is a matter of how I conducted myself mentally. Fortunately all the good moments happen when I’m in Cape Town. It’s a lovely place. We’ve earned so much respect in that part of the world,” Manyama said.

“People love us on that side. Maybe the reason I always do well in Cape Town is because life is slow, relaxed and boring. That helps us to focus more on the game. If it is working, why change it?”

Manyama seems to enjoy life whenever he is in Cape Town. He was part of the Ajax Cape Town side that played outstanding football under Foppe de Haan in 2010/11.

The marksman followed in the foot-steps of legends like Siyabonga Nomvethe, Collins Mbesuma, Pollen Ndlanya and Wilfred Mugeyi, who all won both the Footballer of the Season and Golden Boots Awards.

Next season he will be working alongside former Bafana Bafana great Benni McCarthy, who was recently hired as coach of Cape Town City.

McCarthy replaces Eric Tinkler, who joined SuperSport United to fill the void left by Stuart Baxter, who took on the Bafana coaching position.

“Before Wits signed Schillo (Steven Pienaar) we had the best ‘signing’ of the season in Benni. There aren’t enough words to describe Benni. He is someone who has a lot to share,” Manyama says.

“We are lucky to be the first to benefit from that. All I can ask as captain is that he be given an opportunity. Don’t come and compare him to Zinedine Zidane; Zidane is Zidane at Real Madrid and Benni is Benni at Cape Town City. Judge him at the end of the season. He deserves an opportunity to show what he can do.”

It is an open secret that Mamelodi Sundowns are chasing the signature of Manyama, with coach Pitso Mosimane unequivocal in his admiration for the player.

“It is huge honour to hear him saying that. He is currently the number one coach in Africa, and Sundowns are the number one team,” Manyama says.

“This is football - when you do well you will attract attention. I’m used to that. When I was doing well at Ajax, teams like Chiefs and Pirates came knocking.

"If it’s all speculation, it is okay, it doesn’t bother me. Until my team comes to me I will treat that as the speculation,” Manyama explains.

Next season City will campaign in Africa, having qualified for a CAF Confederation Cup spot after finishing third in their maiden PSL season.

“I’m looking forward to playing in Africa. Recently I was with the national team in Nigeria, and I saw the atmosphere and those are the kind of stages you want to compete on. But we must be very careful of how we approach the competition because it can be damaging in our league campaign. We have to find a way to manage it since we have a small squad, but we look forward to the challenge,” Manyama says.

Cape Times

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