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Redemption Game: Uganda Cranes Fight for Survival Against Guinea

MUHAMMAD JJUMBA & TALENT ATWINE MUVUNYIBy MUHAMMAD JJUMBA & TALENT ATWINE MUVUNYIAugust 7, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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At FUFA’s Kadiba grounds and later Kyambogo University’s pitches, the Cranes have been training with renewed purpose. Tuesday was for recovery. Wednesday was for intensity.
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KAMPALA—Last week at Mandela National Stadium, the weight of history, expectation, and heartbreak descended on Uganda’s national football team with a thud on a humid Monday night. By the final whistle of their 2024 African Nations Championship (CHAN) opener against Algeria, the scoreboard read 3–0. The fans were devastated. The Cranes were shell-shocked. The promise of a dream tournament on home soil had begun in nightmare fashion.

Now, with only hours separating Uganda from their must-win clash against Guinea, the Cranes are out of excuses and running out of time. Friday’s match isn’t just about points. It’s about pride. It’s about ending a pattern of near misses that has defined Uganda’s relationship with CHAN for over a decade. And above all, it’s about belief, both in the team and from the fans.

Uganda’s CHAN journey has been one of persistent promise and persistent heartbreak. Since their debut in 2011, the Cranes have now qualified for seven consecutive editions. But not once, not in Sudan, South Africa, Rwanda, Morocco, or Cameroon, have they made it out of the group stages.

The wounds from their latest opening loss are still raw. Algeria, efficient and clinical, cut through Uganda’s defense with precision. Goals from Ayoub Ghezala, Meziane Aderrahmane, and substitute Soufine Beyazid silenced the home crowd. Uganda was left rooted at the bottom of Group C, and for many, the ghosts of past tournaments came rushing back.

“This is a competition,” said FUFA President Moses Magogo in a public plea on X (formerly Twitter) on Wednesday night. “We still have three more games. If we win them all, we can still advance. Our players need your support more than ever.”

Magogo’s message struck a nerve. There is still time. But time, as Uganda has learned too often, is no substitute for action.

Training with Intent

At FUFA’s Kadiba grounds and later Kyambogo University’s pitches, the Cranes have been training with renewed purpose. Tuesday was for recovery. Wednesday was for intensity.

Midfielder Jude Ssemugabi and defender Emanuel Anyama, both absent from the first training session, returned with sharpness that lifted the squad’s morale. Under the direction of head coach Paul Joseph Put and assistants Morley Byekwaso and Fred Muhumuza, the focus has narrowed: tactical discipline, defensive shape, and urgency in the final third.

Guinea: A Rising Test

Guinea, meanwhile, enters Friday’s match brimming with confidence after edging Niger 1–0 in their opening game. Organized, composed, and physically dominant, the West Africans have built a reputation as tournament dark horses. They sit second in Group C, behind Algeria, and above Uganda, on both the table and momentum.

The historical head-to-head between Uganda and Guinea is balanced but tilting. In nine meetings, Uganda has won three, drawn two, and lost four. Guinea has scored 13 goals to Uganda’s eight. But on paper, history will mean little on Friday. The stakes are simple: Uganda must win or face elimination.

Beyond the Pitch: Fans Frustrated by Poor Logistics

For many fans, matchday one wasn’t just disappointing on the field. It was a logistical disaster.

“I spent the whole day thirsty and hungry,” said one supporter. “We were blocked from bringing in food and drinks, but there was nothing to buy inside.”

Public outcry was swift, and the Local Organizing Committee’s head of PR, Mark Namanya, admitted fault.

“There was miscommunication with CAF,” Namanya said. “They had wanted to manage the canteens themselves, but we’re fixing it. Friday will be different.”

As thousands prepare to descend on Namboole again, many remain hopeful that both the team and the organizers will get it right this time.

To stoke performance, FUFA announced a financial incentive: Shs 1.2 billion will be awarded to the team for each tournament victory. For players, that translates to nearly Shs 30 million apiece per win. Money isn’t the point, but in tournaments like CHAN, where pride is often paired with pressure, every motivation counts.

Uganda’s most promising CHAN runs came in 2014 and 2018, when the Cranes collected four points in the group stages but still failed to advance. There was the win over Burkina Faso in South Africa. The upset of Ivory Coast in Morocco. Flashes of hope. Always cut short.

Now, with group games still ahead against Guinea, Niger, and South Africa, the Cranes are determined to finally write a different ending, this time, in their own backyard.

Uganda isn’t just fighting for CHAN glory. It’s co-hosting AFCON 2027 alongside Kenya and Tanzania. The stakes for performance, infrastructure, and reputation have never been higher.

If Uganda wants to present itself as a serious footballing nation, on and off the pitch, CHAN 2024 is the proving ground. Friday’s game isn’t just about making the quarterfinals. It’s about setting a new standard for the future.

Because if not now, then when?

 

CAF FUFA
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MUHAMMAD JJUMBA & TALENT ATWINE MUVUNYI

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