Game Four of the National Basketball League men’s finals tonight, October 31, will test whether Namuwongo Blazers’ Game Three response was a spark or a shift in momentum.
The defending champions City Oilers lead the best-of-seven series 2–1 and can move within one victory of an eleventh consecutive title if they win tonight at the Lugogo Indoor Arena.
For Namuwongo, the assignment is clear. Win tonight, and the series resets to 2–2. Lose, and the Oilers will be one step from another coronation on Sunday.
Every possession will matter because the Blazers cannot afford to chase the series again.
The Blazers’ 80–70 victory on Tuesday night was a timely rescue. It was their first win of the finals and a reminder that they can compete with the Oilers if they maintain composure and control the tempo.
They had lost the first two games 76–70 and 90–83, failing to close out quarters and struggling to match the Oilers’ bench depth.
But Game Three revealed a different side of Namuwongo. They fought with purpose, defended better, and used every stop as a chance to dictate the rhythm.
Peter Obleng’s 20 points and nine rebounds led that turnaround. His second-half surge changed the game’s mood, while Arthur Wanyoto and Anthony Chukwubuka Chukwurah added crucial scoring to balance the attack.
The return of Tonny Drileba steadied their defense and allowed them to press harder on the Oilers’ backcourt. That collective discipline will need to appear again if they want to turn the series into a contest rather than a chase.
The Oilers, meanwhile, remain the league’s standard for dominance. A team chasing its eleventh straight title rarely loses focus twice in a row.
Chad Bowie, Mer Maker, Fayed Baale and Kurt Wegscheider have been the consistent scoring engines across the series.
Bowie’s control of the perimeter, Maker’s inside strength, and Wegscheider’s shot creation have carried them through tough stretches.
Yet Game Three exposed a vulnerability the Oilers rarely show. They were outworked on rebounds, outpaced in transition, and their bench contributed little when rotations tightened in the fourth quarter.
Coach Mandy Juruni’s side is built on rhythm and experience. When they find their flow, they strangle opponents with spacing and execution.
But the Blazers disrupted that rhythm on Tuesday with defensive variations and off-ball pressure. If they replicate that intensity, the Oilers will need to dig into their deep experience to keep control of the series.
The psychological element now enters the series. For Namuwongo, tonight is about proving that Game Three was not an accident.
For the Oilers, it is about reaffirming their control. Small details will decide it: turnovers, second-chance points, and defensive rotations.
Fans heading to Lugogo or tuning in on NBS Sport and AfroMobile should expect another fierce contest, as tonight’s game is a battle between legacy and ambition.
City Oilers, who have owned the league for a decade, know how to close series. Namuwongo, still searching for their first-ever crown, know how much one win could change their belief.
If the Oilers take Game Four, they can clinch their 11th consecutive title with a win on Sunday. If the Blazers level the series, the final stretch will become a test of endurance, with three possible games left to decide who lifts the 2025 championship.
The stakes are high, and every minute tonight could shape the season’s ending.











 
                                 
			












