Kyantamba Secondary School have emphatically underlined their growing stature at the ongoing UMEA Solidarity Games, surging into the Round of 16 with a sequence of commanding performances that reflect both tactical maturity and renewed belief.
Needing decisive results to secure progression, Kyantamba delivered with precision and composure.
They dismantled Masaka SS 13–06 in a dominant morning display before holding their nerve in a more contested 13–10 victory over Ibn Baz.
Those back-to-back wins ensured a second-place finish in their group with six points, their only blemish a narrow 16–13 defeat to group leaders Hamdan Islamic SS.
Their reward is a Round of 16 rematch against Ibn Baz—a side they have already subdued—though the stakes now demand an even higher level of execution.
Yet, beyond the numbers, Kyantamba’s qualification tells a deeper story of calculated transformation.
Arriving in Mbale burdened by the disappointment of a previous Round of 16 exit, the Kiboga-based outfit has since rewritten its narrative through structure, discipline, and a clear competitive identity.
At the heart of this resurgence is head coach Ephraim Mujabi, whose meticulous approach has reshaped the team into a cohesive and tactically astute unit.
His influence is evident not only in Kyantamba’s organized defensive setups and fluid transitions, but also in their psychological resilience—most notably their ability to respond to setbacks with authority.
Their opening loss to Hamdan Islamic SS offered an early test of character. Kyantamba responded in emphatic fashion, thrashing Nakaloke SS 27–08 in one of the most dominant performances of the group stage.
It was a statement that signaled intent: this was no longer a team content with participation, but one prepared to compete.
Mujabi’s pedigree lends weight to that evolution. With a track record built on sustained success at district and regional levels, and a reputation for player development across multiple institutions, he has steadily engineered a culture rooted in discipline and belief.
His career-defining breakthrough—ending a prolonged cycle of near-misses in high-stakes finals—now finds reflection in Kyantamba’s growing mental fortitude.
That same blueprint is clearly visible in Mbale. Kyantamba are no longer reactive; they are purposeful. Their play carries clarity, their execution consistency, and their ambition unmistakable direction.
While established powerhouses such as Greenlight Islamic SS and Kawanda SS continue to assert their dominance, Kyantamba’s rise has introduced a compelling subplot to this year’s competition.
They may still be refining their edge, but their trajectory is unmistakably upward.
As the knockout phase unfolds at Maluku Grounds, Kyantamba step onto the bigger stage not as underdogs, but as a side gathering momentum at precisely the right moment—organized, confident, and increasingly difficult to ignore.





