KAJANSI—In the echoing halls of St. Mary’s Stadium, Vipers SC made a bold statement: the future is now—and it has a Belgian accent.
On Friday, July 18, 2025, Uganda Premier League champions Vipers SC unveiled Ivan Jacky Minnaert as their new head coach, marking a strategic and potentially defining move in the club’s pursuit of domestic dominance and continental relevance. For a club that has known both glory and turbulence in recent years, Minnaert’s arrival signals a shift toward tactical maturity, international pedigree, and hard-won stability.
A Belgian Veteran With African Roots
Minnaert, 58, is no stranger to African football. With a UEFA Pro License and an impressive résumé that spans Europe and Africa, the Belgian tactician brings a depth of experience rarely seen in the East African football scene. Just this past season, he led Liberia’s Fassell FC to the Liberian Premier League title, finishing 11 points ahead of the nearest challengers—proof that he knows how to win.
“I am very happy to join Vipers Sports Club,” Minnaert said, as cameras flashed in the Kitende sun. “We shall work hard as a team to achieve our targets both locally and internationally.”
Minnaert’s coaching journey has taken him through the dugouts of Djoliba AC (Mali), AS Kaloum (Guinea), AFC Leopards (Kenya), Rayon Sports and Mukura Victory (Rwanda), and South Africa’s Black Leopards. His crowning moment came in 2021 when he guided Al-Ittihad Tripoli to the Libyan Premier League title. With stints in Spain’s lower divisions, he blends European structure with African tactical flexibility—a mix that Vipers desperately need.
Building a Bench—and a Legacy
Minnaert won’t walk this path alone. John “Ayala” Luyinda and Fred Muhumuza, who co-managed the team after Serbian coach Nikola Kavazovic was sacked last season, have been retained—Ayala as technical director and Muhumuza as assistant. Their familiarity with the squad and success under pressure—leading Vipers to a league and cup double—will be vital.
This kind of continuity matters. In the past five years, Vipers have cycled through an eclectic mix of foreign coaches—from Brazilians like Roberto Oliveira and Leonardo Neiva to Spaniards and Serbians. Some won silverware; others barely made it past the touchline. Minnaert becomes the club’s first Belgian coach and, perhaps, its most complete tactician to date.
The Season That Was: Triumph and Turmoil
Despite managerial instability early on, Vipers SC delivered one of their most commanding seasons in recent memory. They clinched their seventh league title with a game to spare, outclassing Kitara FC 2-0 in Hoima. With 69 points from 29 games, they boasted the league’s tightest defense (only 15 goals conceded) and remained unbeaten at home.
Star midfielder Allan Okello topped the scoring charts with 19 goals. Veteran forwards Milton Karisa and Yunus Sentamu provided leadership and flair, while goalkeeper Denis Kiggundu and defender Hilary Mukundane anchored a near-impenetrable backline. A Stanbic Uganda Cup triumph over rivals KCCA FC completed the domestic double.
Yet not all was smooth. Kavazovic’s early dismissal tested the club’s resilience. In stepped Ayala and Muhumuza, steadying the ship and restoring belief—earning both men a place in Vipers folklore.
What Comes Next
With qualification for the CAF Champions League already secured, the arrival of new signings—including Nigerian winger Odili Chukwuma, playmaker Mark Yallah, and versatile midfielder Enock Ssebaggala—underscores the club’s ambitions.
But ambition alone won’t suffice. What Vipers need now is evolution in how they train, think, and execute on the pitch. Minnaert, with his blend of global perspective and gritty realism, might just be the man to steer them there.
Backed by club president Lawrence Mulindwa’s long-term vision, the message is clear: Vipers aren’t just trying to win games. They’re trying to build a legacy.
“The goal is not just to dominate in Uganda,” Minnaert said with a quiet conviction. “It’s to compete—and win—on the continent.”
That journey begins now. And for a club that’s seen its fair share of highs and heartbreaks, this may be the season the Venoms truly learn how to bite back—with precision, with purpose, and with power.