Wednesday, November 5, 2025, will forever be etched in Ugandan basketball folklore as the night the impossible became reality.
At a packed Lugogo Indoor Arena, the Namuwongo Blazers dethroned the mighty City Oilers 68-55 in Game Six to win their first National Basketball League championship, ending a dynasty that had ruled the sport for twelve uninterrupted years.
The final score told only part of the story. This was a coronation born from defiance, a championship forged by four men who once wore Oilers jerseys and understood exactly what it took to dismantle the empire they helped build.
Jimmy Enabu, James Okello, Tonny Drileba, and Ivan Muhwezi; all former Oilers, led the insurrection.
Okello fired a game-high 16 points on the night, Enabu added 12, and Drileba chipped in 10, each basket feeling like poetic justice.
Peter Obleng contributed 11 crucial points as the Blazers out-rebounded the champions 48-33 and outscored their bench 18-9.
The Oilers, who had claimed ten consecutive titles since 2013, appeared destined for number eleven after racing to a 2-0 series lead.
But the Blazers responded with four straight victories, each one chipping away at the aura of invincibility that had surrounded the champions for over a decade.
Game Six began with the Blazers sprinting to a 6-0 lead as their passionate supporters roared with every possession.
The Oilers steadied themselves to edge the first quarter 16-15, but that would be their last moment of control. The teams traded baskets to a 35-35 halftime deadlock before Namuwongo seized the third quarter 18-10, building an insurmountable cushion.
Despite strong individual performances from Jordan Bowie (13 points), Fayed Baale (11), Moses Maker (10), and Kurt-Curry Wegscheider (10), the Oilers shot a frigid 28 percent from beyond the arc and coughed up 20 turnovers.
For a team that had mastered the art of winning for so long, they looked uncharacteristically mortal when it mattered most.
When the final buzzer sounded on the 13-point victory, the Indoor Arena erupted.
Blazers fans flooded the court. Some cried. Some danced. Most couldn’t believe what they had seen. Years of frustration released in a single night. You could feel history breathing.
This was vindication for a club established in 2015, whose roots traced back to pickup games on a missionary-built court in Namuwongo in the 1990s.
This was revenge for their heartbreaking Game Seven loss to these same Oilers in the 2022 finals, when a 66-64 defeat left scars that only a championship could heal.
For the City Oilers, the loss marks the end of an era unlike any other in Ugandan basketball.
Since 2013, they had been the standard; sweeping some challengers, surviving seven-game wars with others, but always, always finding a way to win.
They had become known as “the Dictators,” and for good reason. No team had managed to dethrone them in twelve years.
Until Wednesday night.
The statistics painted a picture of comprehensive dominance: Namuwongo shot 41 percent from the field to the Oilers’ 36, dominated the glass, and scored 28 points in the paint.
But numbers alone cannot capture what transpired: a seismic shift in the balance of power, orchestrated by the very players who once upheld it.
As the Blazers hoisted their first championship trophy, one could only wonder: is this the beginning of a new dynasty, or simply the end of an old one? Only time will tell. But on this November night in Lugogo, history chose its side.
And someday, those Nam Blazers fans who were in Lugogo that night, or those who watched at home on NBS Sport and AfroMobile, will tell their children how it felt when the dictatorship finally ended, and their team took the crown.
























