The president of Vipers SC, Dr. Lawrence Mulindwa, has issued a resounding declaration of faith in his squad’s championship ambitions, pledging a staggering UGX 300 million reward should the Venoms defend and secure the Uganda Premier League crown this season.
The promise, according to exclusive sources at the Vipers, underscores the club’s relentless pursuit of sustained supremacy at the apex of the domestic game.
Should the target be achieved, it would represent the eighth league title in the club’s history, another gilded chapter in a decade defined by the Venoms’ competitive ascendancy.
Dr. Mulindwa’s incentive is not merely rhetorical flourish. The club patron has already disbursed UGX 50 million to the team as a performance bonus for finishing atop the standings at the conclusion of the league’s first round.

That milestone was achieved after the Venoms accumulated 36 points from 14 matches, despite an unusual scheduling anomaly which left them one fixture short of the full first-round slate.
The outstanding encounter against Kitara FC, initially slated as part of a doubleheader, was never contested on the pitch. Months later, however, the fixture became the subject of intense debate after the FUFA controversially awarded Kitara three points.

Notwithstanding the administrative turbulence, the competitive trajectory of Vipers has remained emphatically upward. After 21 matches, the Venoms currently command the summit of the table with 50 points, establishing a four-point cushion over second-placed Kitara FC and a five-point advantage over perennial challengers KCCA FC in third.
Mulindwa’s financial pledge thus arrives at a pivotal juncture in the title race, functioning both as a symbolic endorsement of the squad’s enterprise and as an additional motivational catalyst during the campaign’s decisive phase.

Such gestures are not unprecedented within the Vipers hierarchy. Last season, the club’s president rewarded the squad with UGX 200 million following their triumphant conquest of the Uganda Premier League title. The Venoms secured the championship with 69 points, narrowly edging out NEC FC, who finished two points adrift in second place.
That league success was complemented by further silverware as Vipers completed a domestic double by capturing the Uganda Cup. In a final rich with rivalry and narrative tension, the Venoms dispatched KCCA FC 2–0 to underline their domestic pre-eminence.

The newly promised UGX 300 million windfall therefore symbolizes more than a financial incentive; it is emblematic of Mulindwa’s unwavering devotion to the club’s competitive ethos and his determination to ensure Vipers remain entrenched at the pinnacle of Ugandan football.
Indeed, the Venoms’ recent record provides empirical validation of that ambition. Over the past decade, the club has amassed six of the last ten Uganda Premier League titles, an era of sustained hegemony that has recalibrated the competitive landscape of the domestic game.
Complementing that league dominance are four triumphs in the Uganda Cup, further consolidating Vipers’ stature as one of the most formidable institutions in the country’s footballing architecture.
With the campaign entering its decisive stretch and the prize of UGX 300 million looming on the horizon, the Venoms now find themselves not only defending their supremacy but also pursuing another landmark triumph that would deepen their imprint on the annals of Ugandan football.
























