The Namuwongo Blazers’ maiden voyage into the deep waters of the Road to BAL Elite 16 begins with a test of nerve and history, as they face hosts Nairobi City Thunder tonight, Tuesday, November 18, at 6 PM, at the Moi International Sports Center in Kasarani.
For Ugandan basketball, the fixture is laden with symbolism. Just last December, on this very court, the Thunder shattered the dreams of the Blazers’ arch-rivals, the City Oilers, with a seismic 72-62 semifinal victory.
That win not only ended the Oilers’ quest for a third consecutive BAL appearance but also etched Nairobi City Thunder as the first Kenyan team ever to qualify for the prestigious Basketball Africa League.
Now, the Blazers carry the Uganda flag into the same arena, aiming to succeed where their bitter foes fell.
The team arrives in Nairobi riding a wave of momentum, fresh off dethroning the decade-long dominance of the City Oilers to claim their first-ever National Basketball League title. However, the Elite 16 represents a significantly higher level of competition.
Coach Stephen Nyeko is aware of the challenge but confident in his battle-tested squad. “The guys have been good in practice but I want to see that translate in the game,” Nyeko stated ahead of the high-pressure clash.
His confidence is rooted in a savvy recruitment drive. The Blazers fortified their roster with proven talent, signing four key figures from the former Oilers dynasty: Jimmy Enabu, Tonny Drileba, James Okello, and Ivan Muhwezi, who helped them clinch their maiden NBL title.
This quartet is expected to bring invaluable experience of the Elite 16’s intense demands, having navigated this stage before.
They are joined by American imports who have already tasted African basketball. Jovan Mooring, who played with MBB in the BAL, and the offensively gifted Jaycson Bereal Jr., provide additional firepower and physicality.
Senegalese center Mohammed Sidy Djitte adds a formidable presence in the paint.
Standing in their way is a Thunder squad hungry to make history a habit. Hosting the Elite 16 for the second consecutive year, they have retained the core that won them last year’s edition, and propelled them to the BAL, including Lebanese-South Sudanese power forward Ater Majok, forward Tylor Ongwae, and sharpshooter Albert Odero.
New signings Chase Adams and Lance Thomas have been specifically brought in to bolster their campaign for a second straight BAL qualification.
The tournament format is unforgiving. Group A, featuring the Blazers, Thunder, and South Africa’s Johannesburg Giants, is a three-team battleground where only the top two sides will advance to the semifinals.
After tonight’s clash, Namuwongo will face fellow debutants Johannesburg Giants tomorrow at 6 PM in its final group match.
Success in the group for the Blazers would set up a meeting with either Ferroviario da Beira from Mozambique or Bravehearts BBC from Malawi on Friday. Victory in that semifinal secures a BAL ticket and a place in the final.
























