Former Orlando Pirates goal poacher Andries Sebola has listed five strikers he believes are the best in the club's Premier Soccer League era.
Sebola says that to be successful as a Pirates striker you need to concentrate more on scoring goals rather than anything else.
Scroll through the gallery to view Sebola's top 5 best strikers for the Bucs
"As a striker, you don't dare move away from the box if you want to play for Pirates," Sebola tells snl24.com/kickoff.
"You must have a strong heart because the pressure is on you.
"Make sure you don't go two games without scoring a goal.
"Stay in the box so that the wingers and midfielders always find you there when they deliver those passes.
"The current strikers are working hard, but what they don't understand is that to be a success at Pirates you need to stay in the box.
"I used to talk a lot with Steve Lekoelea because he was a winger and I was a striker, that is why we were having that understanding between the two of us.
"As a striker, we expect goals from you, if you don't meet our expectations we will put you on transfer.
"Going two games without scoring would worry me a lot, even now I'm talking to snl24.com/kickoff because I was scoring goals.
"After every match, we wanted to see my name in the news, on television and radio.
"A real striker can't go two games without scoring a goal."
Sebola's 5 Best Strikers:
Joseph Ngake: We used to call him bullet because he was a hard runner.
Dennis Lota: "The late, the silent assassin, he didn't even talk too much 'Chesa Mpama', me and him we were more or less the same type of players. We didn't have the body so we positioned ourselves so that we can score goals."
Sibusiso Zuma: "Not selfish, but very mobile and created chances. Very good in shielding the ball to create chances for teammates. I was not surprised when he went to Denmark."
Andries Sebola: "Positioning inside the box, scoring crucial goals, I didn't want to see myself being a loser. Whatever opportunity they gave me I made sure I score goals. I was always in the kitchen. In 1998 I was the club's top goalscorer with 12 goals even though in most of the games I was coming on as a substitute."
Jerry Sikhosana: "Jerry was topping us. He was harassing defenders, creating chances for us, and scoring goals in awkward angles. He was selfish. The best thing about him was scoring goals from all angles. The man was a winner, he wanted to be praised after a game. He was delivering, to be honest with you."