In Morocco on Friday, the Uganda Cranes found more than a 2–1 win over Chad, they found a revival story years in the making.
For Melvyn Lorenzen, the moment had been nearly a decade away.
Not since 2016 had he pulled on Uganda’s colours, and for years his name lived more in “what could have been” conversations than on team sheets.
But football has a way of opening new chapters when you least expect them.
On his return to the fold, Lorenzen stepped onto the pitch with the hunger of a man who had unfinished business, and he marked his comeback the only way a forward knows how: with a goal. Clean. Composed. Cathartic.
A reminder of the talent that once flickered and may now burn brighter.
On the opposite end of the storyline was Uche Mubiru, another player with Ugandan roots who had long hovered on the edge of the national team picture.
The coaches came and went, invitations were made, but the timing, for reasons only football can script, was never right.
Until now. Finally wearing the Cranes shirt in a competitive spirit, Uche took responsibility from the spot and buried a pressure-soaked penalty for his first goal in national colours.
One touch, one strike, one statement: I’m here now.
The win over Chad might read like a routine friendly result on paper, but beneath the scoreline lies a deeper subplot, two players reconnecting with their heritage, two journeys bending back toward home.
Both born outside Uganda, both carrying the nation in their lineage, and both now choosing to lace up for the badge, the anthem, and the cause.
For the Cranes, these are not just goals, they are signs of a broader rebuild, a widening net, and a renewed drive to strengthen the squad with every resource available.
It is a reminder that modern football is global, talent is scattered, and identity often stretches far beyond borders.
When the final whistle blew in Morocco, the scoreboard said Uganda 2, Chad 1.
But the real victory was something else entirely: a team evolving, a squad expanding, and two long-awaited returns turning into goals that may shape the Cranes’ future.
























