Matooke Republic
Monday, February 2, 2026
  • 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

Andrew Kabuura Column: Here’s how we can revive local football

Matooke Republic by Matooke Republic
March 18, 2016
in Columns, Sports
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

RELATED POSTS

Jacob Kiplimo ready to defend Barcelona Half Marathon title

How Guinness sits at the heart of Uganda’s Premier League culture

kabuura2By Andrew Kabuura

On Saturday, like most of my weekends, I decided to catch a soccer game at a popular Kampala bar. Luckily for me, for the sake of the atmosphere, I was joined by over 30 other football fans.

As the tradition goes, at half time we all engaged in various football debates, most relating to the first half. I believe City should have taken the lead. Some disagreed. It’s fine. Anyway that’s not the point. The point is why don’t we Ugandans have the same energy used to dissect the EPL when it to comes to the Uganda Premier League? The energy used by some of fans to explain their points was amazing.They know the entire squads, team numbers, players’ origin and some even know how many children each player has. Plus, the wife’s name. It’s amazing!




The Uganda Cranes finished fourth in the 1962 Africa Cup of Nations and did even better in 1978, only losing to Ghana in the final. Back home, thousands always made a date with the then Uganda Super League. Legends were made as Ugandan football soared. All this has, unfortunately, changed.

We barely know our own stars anymore. We now even place bets on European teams because we know a lot about them that we make judgments even before kick-off. The young are massively pledging their loyalty to various teams before they even learn how to spell their own names. From a nationalistic perspective, it’s sad.

Sports Club Villa players celebrate the Uganda Cup win of the 2014/15 season, unfortunately, there were no fans in the stadium to celebrate with.
Sports Club Villa players celebrate the Uganda Cup win of the 2014/15 season, unfortunately, there were no fans in the stadium to celebrate with.

Premier League matches were first screened in Uganda in 1995 and this could easily be the biggest mindset-changing event of the century. Why and how did we all forget our local game, our pride! What happened?

Even with the European leagues getting stronger, fans in Ghana (Asante Kotoko vs Hearts of Oark), Egypt (Al Ahly vs Zamalek), South Africa (Chiefs vs Pirates), Tanzanaia (Simba vs Yanga) and in our neighbourhood Kenya (Gor Mahia vs AFC leopards) the attitude towards their local games, especially the derbies, has never changed. In some, it’s even gotten more vibrant.

Remember those very countries have more players in these European leagues meaning they naturally have a bigger inclination to follow those leagues. Today, the big matches between traditional giants like KCC, SC Villa and Express attract fewer than 3000 fans compared to an average 15,000 some 10 or 15 years ago. So what got Ugandans away from the stadia?

In my opinion, it’s because human beings are naturally fickle. We love watching what we consider better and richer. We in turn, ignore ours. Of course issues like quality come into play. We aren’t far behind the rest of Africa. We just don’t believe we have piles of talent. We don’t believe we can have 70% of locally based lads play for the Cranes. Like it’s done in Egypt, Tanzania or even South Africa.
We must focus on the basics. Go back to the drawing board. We must package football better. We must go back to the grassroots, force teams into having academies at various age groups. We must mind facilities. We must work with government to avail more of our taxes for football development. We must appreciate sports science to enhance performance. We must train coaches. We must advertise the matches to fans and we must learn from those better organised. We must stick to the right TV deals for the development of our game.

It would seem safe to predict that until standards improve dramatically in the local Ugandan league; fans looking for more thrilling entertainment will stay glued to TV screens showing “better” football. Certainly the Federation and the new UPL management seem to be thinking about most of these. We should support them.

Kabuura is a Supersport commentator … @andrewkabuura




Related

Tags: Andrew KabuurasportsUganda CranesUganda Super League
Share3Tweet2Send
Matooke Republic

Matooke Republic

Freshly peeled info from area code 256

Related Posts

Allan Okello.

How much Vipers SC is cashing in on Allan Okello’s transfer to Tanzanian giants Young Africans

by Matooke Republic
3 weeks ago

...

Uganda knocked out of AFCON 2025 after 3–1 loss to Nigeria

by Matooke Republic
1 month ago

...

AFCON 2025: What Uganda Must Do to Reach the Round of 16

by Matooke Republic
1 month ago

...

2025 AFCON: Uganda, Tanzania meet for historic clash as both seek first points

by Matooke Republic
1 month ago

...

Uganda open AFCON 2025 campaign with tough test against Tunisia

by Matooke Republic
1 month ago

...

Next Post

Micho names 18 foreign-based professionals for Burkina Faso double-header

Africell's Commercial Director,  Milad Khairallah (L) and other Africell staff.

Africell's Shs500 voice bundle hits the market

EC EC EC

RECOMMENDED

Besigye’s son raises alarm over father’s detention and health

February 2, 2026
Mowzey Radio.

Remembering Mowzey Radio: A look back at his impact on Ugandan music

February 2, 2026

MOST VIEWED

  • UNEB releases 2025 PLE results as candidate numbers rise and Division One passes improve

    49 shares
    Share 20 Tweet 12
  • LIST: Ministers who lost their seats in the 2026 Parliamentary Elections

    424 shares
    Share 170 Tweet 106
  • Jose Chameleone launches Chameleone FM in Burundi

    43 shares
    Share 17 Tweet 11
  • Court dismisses former Minister Sarah Opendi’s bid for a vote recount after losing Tororo District Woman MP race by just 35 votes

    18 shares
    Share 7 Tweet 5
  • Here are the heavy sanctions handed to Senegal and Morocco after AFCON final chaos

    13 shares
    Share 5 Tweet 3
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.