Uganda’s Africa Cup of Nations campaign stumbled again on Saturday night as the Cranes were held to a 1–1 draw by Tanzania in Rabat, a result that deepened the sense of missed opportunity rather than relief.
Played on December 27, 2025, at Stade El Barid in Morocco’s capital, the Group encounter carried weight far beyond the fixture list. For Uganda, it was a chance at redemption after a bruising defeat to Tunisia. For Tanzania, it was another attempt to end a long, winless AFCON run. Neither fully succeeded.
Ugandan supporters arrived in Rabat early and organised, travelling by train from Casablanca with drums, chants and confidence. Along the way, curiosity from local Moroccans turned into camaraderie, swelling Uganda’s voice inside the stadium. Tanzania’s fans responded in kind, creating a lively backdrop as 10,540 spectators braved the cold in the 18,500-capacity arena.
On the pitch, Uganda seized the initiative in the first half. The Cranes pressed aggressively, forced turnovers and spent long spells in Tanzanian territory. Yet the dominance produced no breakthrough, and Tanzania remained dangerous on the counterattack.
The deadlock broke just before the hour mark through controversy. Tanzania won a penalty after a handball, and Simon Msuva converted confidently, firing into the roof of the net to give the Taifa Stars the lead and silence the Ugandan end.
With Tanzania defending deep in search of a rare AFCON victory, Uganda pushed harder. The pressure finally told in the 80th minute when substitute Uche Ikpeazu powered in a diving header, restoring parity and reigniting belief among the Cranes’ faithful.
Rain soon followed, soaking the pitch and turning the closing minutes into a frantic contest defined by sliding tackles, loose touches and urgency from both sides.
Then came the moment that defined the night. Uganda won a late penalty. Allan Okello stepped up. His effort sailed over the bar.
The miss drained the stadium of its energy. When the final whistle blew, the scoreboard read 1–1, but the emotional balance tilted sharply against Uganda.
The draw leaves both sides with one point each from two matches, and Uganda’s qualification hopes now hang by a thread. Matters look tougher still with Nigeria next, especially after the Super Eagles defeated the team that had earlier beaten the Cranes.
The numbers are unforgiving, but the journey continues. As Uganda heads to Fez for its next fixture on December 30, the drums will travel on, carrying belief that football can still rewrite the script, even when the margins are painfully thin.

