Saturday 8 December 2012

Uganda beats Kenya to 2012 Cecafa title


KAMPALAUganda Cranes have beaten Kenya’s Harambee Stars 2-1 at Namboole Stadium to defend the Cecafa Cup title they won last year in Tanzania.

The hosts’ first goal ricocheted off Kenyan defender and captain Anthony Kimani and into the back of the net, thanks to a powerful shot by Robert Ssentongo from a right wing build-up.

Ssentongo’s goal kept the two sides separate until late into the 87th minute when an Edwin Lavatsa’s equalizer changed the atmosphere inside a fully-packed Namboole Stadium.  But then, the defending champions wrapped up their victory three minutes later courtesy of a brilliant Geoffrey Kizito header from a measured free-kick.

Uganda’s tally in the regional tournament now stands at 13 titles, while Kenya remain second-best with five final victories.
The former's record comes on the back of an unbeaten run this year, having let only one ball past its goalmouth from Lavatsa's equalizer in the final showpiece.
Brian Umony received the player-of-the-tournament award, Robert Ssentongo was the best striker of the event, and the accolade for the best goalkeeper went to Hamza Muwonge.
Uganda Cranes now are USD30,000 (about sh81 million) richer for their top place finish in the tournament, and the Harambee Stars go back home with a well-earned USD20,000.

It wasn’t smooth sailing for the defending champions against the very team they beat 1-0 in the opening of the event. The Harambee Stars, who travelled to Kampala without their head coach Henri Michel, returned a much better side.

Saturday’s final showdown ushered in a quick-paced game, with both sides looking ever sharp and agile.

Uganda’s first real attack came just three minutes into the first half but Kenyan Number One Duncan Ochieng’s hands proved safe enough. Equally, Kenya’s first corner kick, and the first of the game in the 5th minute, was eased away very well by the Cranes back.

A cocktail of spirited attacks, thundering attacks and heart-stopping shots from either end of the pitch sprinkled life into the opening minutes of game play but yielded no goals.

The midfield started off the busier part of the field than any other, with Kenya’s Mike Baraza injecting hope for an opener into his fellows teammates.  On the other end, Emmanuel Okwi was busy launching lethal attacks goalwards.

But only many a time did his efforts go wasted.

The energy invested into the game came to a temporary halt in the 16th minute when Kenya’s David Owino Odhiambo pulled a hamstring without contact. That injury saw his playing time come to an agonizing end with teammate Kevin Omondi stepping on in his place.

Harambee Stars’ early substitution threw the game into a new dimension when the hosts mounted more pressure from the front right wing. Eventually, the opener came through in the 28th minute when Ssentongo fired a heavy ball goalwards, and was lucky to bounce off Kenya's captain and past keeper Ochieng.
Despite going a goal down, the Kenyans hang tightly on, experimenting with the arial balls every now and then. Mike Baraza, who featured in the 2008 final when the two sides had last met in the final, had a busy evening, orchestrating quite a number of attacks alongside Clifton Miheso.
Just on the brink of the break, Lavatsa's effort past Ugandan keeper Muwonge sure looked like an assured equalizer, only for it to kiss off the outer post and out. Agony for the Harambee Stars.
The second half brought into play a number of substitutes, and Cranes' coach going for a switch in formation, placing three attackers out there.

Cecafa final result
Uganda 2
(Kimani o/g 28', Kizito 90') Kenya 1 (Lavatsa 87')
Third-place playoff
Tanzania 1 Zanzibar 1 (Zanzibar won 6-5 through penalties


Emmanuel Okwi, who had an enjoyable game, came off for Said Kyeyune in the 65th minute, just moments after the fans had their share of off-pitch cheering when ushers brought down the coveted trophy.
The Kenyan coach brought on Paul Were for Kevin Omondi 10 minutes to full time, hopefully to change the scoreline. And when the Stars started to run out of time, Lavatsa's 87th-minute goal could not have come at a better time.
But the joy of the visitors was shortlived when Kizito's header into the top corner of the net from a right wing freekick sent the whole stadium into a thundering eruption.
And when Burundian referee Thierry Nkurunziza blew his whistle after three minutes of added time, Uganda, with an unbeaten record this year, would be crowned the Cecafa champions, a record 13 times.

1 comment: