The Uganda Premier League has concluded its first round with a table that, on paper, appears orderly, as Vipers SC sit top on 36 points from 14 matches, six clear of Entebbe UPPC FC.
Yet beneath this veneer of routine lies an administrative farce so stark it borders on satire: while most clubs have completed 15 matches, Vipers SC and Kitara FC remain stranded on 14, their fixture suspended in bureaucratic limbo.
The absence of that match is not a mystery. It is a choice. More than two months after the controversy that led to its postponement,and after FUFA itself abandoned the very league format that triggered the Vipers standoff, the federation has still not found the resolve to reschedule the game.
The calendar has moved. The competition has marched on. Only this fixture has been frozen in time, as though indecision were now an acceptable tool of governance.
This is not an issue of logistics. The Uganda Premier League has never struggled to find space for midweek fixtures, compressed schedules, or late adjustments when the will exists. The issue here is institutional reluctance.
FUFA blinked on the format, quietly conceding that the system Vipers challenged was unworkable. Yet the club that forced that correction now finds itself suspended in competitive uncertainty, punished not by regulation, but by delay. Or, is it some form of revenge?
Silence has become policy. No official communication. No clear timeline. No explanation to supporters, players, sponsors, or the league itself. As the second round approaches, the competition table is already structurally compromised: some teams will begin the next phase having completed more matches than the league leaders. This is not merely untidy; it is competitively corrosive.
A league’s credibility rests not on its slogans, but on the integrity of its processes. Fixtures are the league’s grammar. When one sentence is left unfinished, the entire narrative loses coherence.
FUFA’s refusal to conclude what it began, by simply rescheduling Vipers versus Kitara, has turned the standings into a provisional document, a table with a footnote of embarrassment.
The irony is exquisite. FUFA corrected a flawed format, yet now appears determined to preserve a flawed outcome. It has overturned the rule but retained the punishment. It has conceded error while administering consequence. In doing so, it sends a message as troubling as it is unmistakable: reform may be permitted, but dissent will be remembered.
If Kitara FC deserve points, let them earn them on the pitch. If Vipers SC erred, let them lose there. Football’s authority flows from competition, not from corridors of indecision. To withhold a fixture while the league advances is to distort the very competition FUFA is charged with protecting.
A league cannot be led by silence. A federation cannot govern by omission. And football cannot be administered as an afterthought.
Until that match is played, or at the very least honestly accounted for, FUFA’s stewardship of the Uganda Premier League will remain not merely questionable, but theatrically inadequate: a competition run with whistles, but without the courage to blow one when it matters.

























