Matooke Republic
Tuesday, October 21, 2025
  • Home
  • News
  • Entertainment
  • Gossip
  • Features
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Photos
  • Relationships
Matooke Republic
  • Home
  • News
  • Entertainment
  • Gossip
  • Features
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Photos
  • Relationships
No Result
View All Result
Matooke Republic
No Result
View All Result

Why KCCA-Vipers is Ugandan football’s new derby

William Kasoba by William Kasoba
November 9, 2018
in Featured Stories, Features, Sports
Reading Time: 4 mins read
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

For years, Ugandan football had avariety of potent local club rivalries,all of which rode on the historical VEK (Villa, Express, KCC) oligopoly. For generations,players battled for the pride of their badge in these fixtures; (then) KCC against Express, SC Villa against KCC, and obviously
none bigger than Express versus SC Villa.

Now, all those games, while still present on the Uganda Premier League (UPL) fixture list, stand almost forgotten. The fixture that matters is the one between KCCA FC
and Vipers SC.

RELATED POSTS

Equity Bank shines at 2025 Uganda Bankers Sports Gala with strong team performances

Arua City Tower sparks outrage on social media over design and colour choice

Last weekend as the two sides went head to head in their first tussle of the StarTimes UPL this season, a capacity crowd was on hand to welcome them at the St Mary’s Stadium in Kitende. Vociferous fans clad in their respective teams’ jerseys started cheering even before kickoff, creating an electric atmosphere and demanding nothing from players but spirited play and bragging rights. There is no question this fixture is becoming the most prestigious and Ugandan football’s new ‘derby’ – and here’s why:


The similarity in football ambitions


For the past five seasons, the UPL title has been exchanged between two clubs only, with KCCA winning it three time and Vipers twice. Last season the encounters between the two sides had all characteristic of a grudge match. This saw Vipers overpower KCCA in Kitende to claim the UPL title. KCCA responded by halting Vipers attempt at a double as it defeated them 1-0 in the Uganda Cup before also seeing them off on penalties in the Super Cup at the start of this season. If there is any number of clubs to challenge for domestic trophies at this
time, KCCA and Vipers are the first two clubs on that list.


Excitement and attendance
Judging from last weekend’s attendance at St Mary’s Stadium, the tie seems to be getting bigger and better every season.

“I can no longer miss a game between my team Vipers against KCCA. It’s the most exciting
in the league,” one fan stated. Former Proline coach and ex-KCCA player
Mujib Kasule also told Matooke Republic the rise of the KCCA-Vipers derby had something to do with slumps at both Villa and Express.

“We all know the problems SC Villa and Express have been facing. Theira dministration lost vision.

“And about the fans, these clubs have been relying on fans they recruited in the 70s, and now at this time most of them have died, aged or even concentrated on other activities,” Mujib said, adding that the clubs must go back to the drawing board and rebuild their fanbases.


Is it a breed of talents?


For KCCA’s publicist Moses Magero, it is about the two sides having the best squads in the league for the past three seasons, as evidenced by the national team call-ups. Both sides regularly contribute three or more players to Cranes squads summoned for major engagements. This, according to Magero, is one of the reasons this fixture always
sees the highest caliber of football on display, drawing fans back. Plus, it sets the
competitive tone.

“KCCA players believe they are the best while Vipers players seemnot to buy into that from the structures, systems, financials, coaches, fans name it.This is your typical modern day derby,” hesaid, adding that since KCCA has gone a notch higher and played on the continent’sbiggest stage, the Caf Champions League, ithas set a standard that Vipers SC is hoping to match.


Decline of KCCA’s old rivals


With SC Villa’s dominance in local football having ended in 2004 when they won the league and Express having last won it in 2012, it was inevitable that the death of what was once the country’s biggest derby between these two giants would soon follow. Their dramatic decline created a vacuum which the Vipers and KCCA fixture has come to fill. According to according veteran journalist David Lumansi, it is not that the traditional clubs have declined but rather a change in mindset.

“Rivalries [tend to] come naturally without a professional touch, just like these clubs got fans naturally with no professional touch.Our football has just joined the professionalbandwagon at a time when the current crops of the ‘would be’ fans are grandchildrenof those fans who were around whenthese clubs were strong. Meaning it is not just a change in generations, but alsochange in the mindset of football fans,” he reasoned.

In other words, KCCA and Vipers switched to digital while Villa and Express are stuck in analogue.

Related

Share3Tweet2Send
William Kasoba

William Kasoba

Related Posts

Equity Bank shines at 2025 Uganda Bankers Sports Gala with strong team performances

by Matooke Republic
1 hour ago

...

EC Chairperson Simon Byabakama.

Electoral Commission confirms readiness for parliamentary nominations

by Matooke Republic
1 hour ago

...

“I’m creating music that tells our story,” Elijah Kitaka speaks out ahead of the Gordon’s Acacia Brunch Affair

by Matooke Republic
2 hours ago

...

Ugandans launch petition to grant Muzungu Boda citizenship

by Matooke Republic
2 hours ago

...

Arua City Tower sparks outrage on social media over design and colour choice

by Matooke Republic
1 day ago

...

Next Post
Ugandan students from St. Mary's College in Aboke listen as former abducted girls who returned from captivity by Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) rebels talk about their ordeal during a ceremony October 10, 2005 to commemorate the abduction day . Nine years ago LRA rebels abducted 139 students of St. Mary?s College in Aboke, releasing 109 students when the school?s deputy headmistress Rachele Fassera, an Italian nun, followed the rebels into the bush but retained 30 girls, most of them aged between 14 and 15 years. Twenty-four of the girls have since returned at different times and five are believed to have died. The fate of one is not yet known. Picture taken October 10, 2005. REUTERS/Hudson Apunyo - RTR196Y8

EDUCATION: Half of Uganda’s parents do not speak to anyone about problems they see at school

Cricket Cranes aim to join the big boys as Division III qualifiers start

RECOMMENDED

Equity Bank shines at 2025 Uganda Bankers Sports Gala with strong team performances

October 21, 2025
EC Chairperson Simon Byabakama.

Electoral Commission confirms readiness for parliamentary nominations

October 21, 2025

MOST VIEWED

  • PHOTOS: Irene Ntale and Vincent Kalibbala tie the knot

    27 shares
    Share 11 Tweet 7
  • Police to recruit 100,000 Special Constables ahead of 2026 elections

    96 shares
    Share 38 Tweet 24
  • Arua City Tower sparks outrage on social media over design and colour choice

    14 shares
    Share 6 Tweet 4
  • Here is the Math of How Uganda Can Qualify for the Playoffs in the World Cup Qualifiers

    63 shares
    Share 25 Tweet 16
  • Doctors reveal final moments of Raila Odinga after cardiac arrest

    9 shares
    Share 4 Tweet 2
Matooke Republic

Uganda's only free Newspaper. Out every Thursday. Freshly peeled info. kiwatule, Kampala, Uganda.

  • Home
  • News
  • Entertainment
  • Gossip
  • Features
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Photos

© Matooke Republic 2024

© Matooke Republic 2024

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.