RABAT — Uganda’s Africa Cup of Nations campaign has reached its first defining moment sooner than expected. After a bruising 3–1 defeat to Tunisia in their opening Group C match, the Cranes now face a familiar and unforgiving test: an East African derby against Tanzania that will determine whether their tournament still has life.
Saturday’s meeting at Al Madina Stadium in Rabat is no longer just a group fixture. It is a must-win. Anything less, head coach Paul Put has made clear, could leave Uganda chasing shadows for the rest of AFCON 2025.
“The pressure now is not from a draw; a draw is not enough,” Put said after the Tunisia loss. “You have to win your next game to keep your hopes alive for second or third place. It will be very tough, but I believe we can do better than we did today.”
The defeat to Tunisia was not merely about the scoreline. It exposed gaps in intensity, belief, and execution—areas that often separate AFCON survivors from early casualties. Put did not sugar-coat the performance.
“I’m very disappointed as the coach of Uganda because we were not in the game,” he said. “We showed too much respect. We were not aggressive, and at the Africa Cup of Nations, you have to win the duels and the second balls. Unfortunately, that didn’t happen today.”
For long stretches, Uganda looked tentative, cautious against a Tunisian side that imposed itself early and rarely let go. Put estimated his team only managed “20 to 25 minutes in the game, but without being dangerous,” a level he described as “not enough for playing in the Africa Cup of Nations.”
Now comes the response phase—the moment when tournaments pivot. Uganda’s technical staff will review mistakes, but the correction must be swift. “We have to do better,” Put said. “But I believe we can succeed.”
Fitness concerns add another layer of uncertainty. Defender Elio Capradossi suffered a back injury during training and was taken to hospital, limiting his involvement against Tunisia. “We will try to get him fit for the next game (on Saturday against Tanzania),” Put said, adding that several other players are being monitored following recent friendlies.
Inside the camp, however, the mood remains outwardly steady. Captain Khalid Aucho, one of the squad’s most experienced figures, insists the bigger picture has not changed.
“Our goal is to go further than we did in 2019,” Aucho said, referring to Uganda’s Round of 16 exit in Egypt. “The players are ready to give their best in the upcoming games.”
Aucho also brushed aside questions about preparation, noting that although some players arrived late due to FIFA regulations, the team had assembled early enough to build cohesion. “We arrived early to prepare ourselves. We were not complete at first, but we have been preparing since the 8th, and everyone is ready,” he said.
A Rivalry Forged in History
If Uganda needed a familiar opponent to reignite belief, Tanzania is as familiar as it gets. The two sides have met 63 times in men’s international football across regional tournaments, qualifiers, and friendlies. Uganda holds the historical edge, with 34 wins to Tanzania’s 13, alongside 16 draws.
But statistics only tell part of the story. This rivalry is as emotional as it is competitive—rooted in geography, shared football culture, and decades of regional contests where margins are thin and pride is heavy.
Although the teams have never met at the AFCON finals, their qualifying history hints at balance rather than dominance. In 12 AFCON qualifier encounters, Uganda has five wins, Tanzania four, with three draws. Recent meetings underline how evenly matched they have become.
During the 2023 AFCON qualifiers, Tanzania edged Uganda 1–0 in Dar es Salaam at Benjamin Mkapa Stadium. Uganda responded in kind at Namboole, winning the return fixture 1–0. Each side landed a punch. Neither blinked.
That symmetry matters now. With Tunisia top of the group and Nigeria also on three points after defeating Tanzania 2–1, both East African neighbours enter this derby searching for their first points of the tournament. For Tanzania, this is a chance to assert progress after recent AFCON appearances in 2019 and 2023. For Uganda, it is about survival—and momentum.
Uganda’s AFCON pedigree runs deeper. This is their eighth appearance at the finals, with a storied history that includes a runner-up finish in 1978. Their 2019 run to the Round of 16 offered proof that, on the right day, the Cranes can compete with Africa’s best.
But AFCON is unforgiving. Reputation counts for little once the whistle blows. What matters now is response: sharper duels, braver decisions, and a willingness to impose themselves rather than react.
For Uganda, the message is stark but simple. The tournament now runs through Tanzania. Win, and belief returns. Falter, and AFCON 2025 risks becoming another story of promise undone by fine margins.
In Rabat, under the lights, an old rivalry will decide how long Uganda’s African journey lasts.
