Fill walls are not very good applications for tieback anchors. Usually, a more economical solution is to use an MSE wall for retaining embankment. If the contractor is more comfortable installing sheet piling or soldier beams, then I also would consider tie rods back to some type of deadman or deadmen. You did not say how high the wall will be. Also, with a fill wall, you need to look harder at the intermediate conditions as the fill is being placed. Significant fill needs to be placed before the deadmen are installed but you can't install the deadmen before the fill is installed. The critical design case may not be the final, full-height wall.
Manta Ray anchors are capable of relatively low working loads. Manta Rays and the other anchors that GeoPaveTraffic mentions require various types of equipment to drill-in or drive the anchors. If the wall needs multiple tiers of anchors, it will be difficult to get the drilling equipment to each tieback elevation. I'd look at an MSE wall (with a wire basket facing) or sheeting with tie rods and deadmen unless the wall is less than 12 to 14 feet high and can be cantilevered. Check the bedrock elevation which could interfere with embedment of sheeting. Also consider settlement of the embankment and the additional loads this could put on the tie rods. Tie rods are usually designed for tension, not combined tension and bending.