Uganda Premier League Explained

Uganda Premier League
Country:Uganda
Confed:CAF
Founded:1968
Teams:16
Relegation:FUFA Big League
Levels:1
Domest Cup:Ugandan Cup
Super 8
Confed Cup:Champions League
Confederation Cup
Champions:SC Villa (17th title)
Season:2023 - 24
Most Successful Club:SC Villa (17 titles)
Top Goalscorer:Majid Musisi
(113 goals)
Current:2024–25 Uganda Premier League

The Ugandan Premier League, also known as the StarTimes Uganda Premier League for sponsorship reasons, is the top division of the Federation of Uganda Football Associations. The league was previously known as the Uganda Super League but changed in the 2014–15 season after new management taking over.[1] The league's roots date back to 1968 when the National First Division League was established.[2]

History

Original concept

The genesis of club football in Uganda was an idea copied from England by Balamaze Lwanga and Polycarp Kakooza. The objective was to improve Uganda's performances in the Africa Cup of Nations after disappointing results in the finals in 1962 (fourth-place finish) and 1968 (lost all three group stage matches), both held in Ethiopia. The intention was to start a Uganda National League (the forerunner of the Uganda Super League) to create the foundation for a strong national team. At the same time, the identification of players from the grassroots would be made easier and systematic.[3]

Because there were no clubs to form a league, institutions and districts were contacted to form teams. The 1968 inaugural top-flight league was composed of Prisons, Army, Coffee, Express, Jinja, Masaka, Mbarara, and Mbale. There were three institutions and four districts and one club.[3] The league was known as the National First Division League, and the first league champions were Prisons FC Kampala (now known as Maroons FC).[2]

After four seasons, the political turbulence in Uganda impacted on the league. The 1972 and 1973 championships were not completed because of civil unrest. In 1974, the league became known as the National Football League and this title was used until 1982 when the league was trimmed to ten teams and was renamed the Super League (shortened to Super Ten in that inaugural season).[2]

Super League advent

The emergence of the Super League in 1982 saw the development of SC Villa as the country's leading club. Through the 1980s and a good part of the 1990s, competition between Express, KCC FC and SC Villa lit up the league and fans attended in hoards.[4]

SC Villa won the league for the first time in 1982 and over the next 22 years totalled 16 league titles. KCC FC and Express won the championship title in the intervening years.

Match-fixing

In 2003, football in Uganda hit its lowest ebb as SC Villa put 22 goals past Akol FC when the league title went down to goal difference with Express. This was one of the biggest scandals in Ugandan football and thereafter, there was a complete media shutdown in all matters pertaining to local football.[4] Fans became increasingly disillusioned and deserted the stadia thus affecting the teams financially.[5] The episode represented one of many that has plagued Ugandan football.[6]

Previous winners

YearsChampions
1968–69Prisons FC (1)
1969Prisons FC (2)
1970Coffee United Sports Club (1)
1971Simba FC (1)
1972 Not held
1973 Not held
1974Express FC (1)
1975Express FC (2)
1976Kampala City Council (1)
1977Kampala City Council (2)
1978Simba FC (2)
1979Uganda Commercial Bank FC (1)
1980Nile Breweries FC (1)
1981Kampala City Council (3)
1982Villa SC (1)
1983Kampala City Council (4)
1984Villa SC (2)
1985Kampala City Council (5)
1986Villa SC (3)
1987Villa SC (4)
1988Villa SC (5)
1989Villa SC (6)
1990Villa SC (7)
1991Kampala City Council (6)
1992Villa SC (8)
1993Express FC (3)
1994Villa SC (9)
1995Express FC (4)
1996Express FC (5)
1997Kampala City Council (7)
1998Villa SC (10)
1999Villa SC (11)
2000Villa SC (12)
2001Villa SC (13)
2002Villa SC (14)
2002–03Villa SC (15)
2004Villa SC (16)
2005Police FC (1)
2006Uganda Revenue Authority SC (1)
2006–07Uganda Revenue Authority SC (2)
2007–08Kampala City Council (8)
2008–09Uganda Revenue Authority SC (3)
2009–10Vipers SC (1)
2010–11Uganda Revenue Authority SC (4)
2011–12Express FC (6)
2012–13Kampala City Council (9)
2013–14Kampala City Council (10)
2014–15Vipers SC (2)
2015–16Kampala City Council (11)
2016–17Kampala City Council (12)
2017–18Vipers SC (3)
2018–19Kampala City Council (13)
2019–20Vipers SC[7] (4)
2020–21Express FC (7)
2021–22Vipers SC (5)
2022–23Vipers SC (6)
2023–24Villa SC (17)

Performances by club

ClubPrevious namesSettlementTitlesChampionship Seasons
Nakivubo Boys
Nakivubo Villa
1982, 1984, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1992, 1994, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2002–03, 2004, 2023 - 24
Kampala City Council FC 1976, 1977, 1981, 1983, 1985, 1991, 1997, 2007–08, 2012–13, 2013–14, 2015–16, 2016–17, 2018–19
Express Red Eagles 1974, 1975, 1993, 1995, 1996, 2011–12, 2020–21
Bunamwaya SC 2009–10, 2014–15, 2017–18, 2019–20, 2021–22, 2022 - 23
2006, 2006–07, 2008–09, 2010–11
Prisons FC 1968–69, 1969
Army 1971, 1978
1970
1980
2005
1979

Top scorers

YearTop scorersTeamGoals
1968–69
1969Ali Kitonsa[8] 36
1970Express
197118
1972Paschal LuwaggaExpress
1973Joy Ssebuliba Lint FC 17*
197414
197512
197622
197724
197832
197918
198021
1981Nytil FC 18
198222
198321
198418
198528
1986Tobacco FC 29
198728
1988Nsambya FC 17
198915
199028
199118
199229
199320
199421
1995Uganda Electricity Board FC 20
1996Uganda Electricity Board FC 21
YearTop scorersTeamGoals
1997KCC FC
Umeme FC
18
199818
199945
200027
200124
200222
2002–0316
2004Osborn Mundia
Kinyara FC
13
20058
200615
2006–0720
2007–0815
2008–0922
2009–10Bunamwya 21
2010–1114
2011–1213
2012–1320
2013–14Tony Odur
Francis Solaki
KCC
Soana FC
15
2014–1515[9]
2015–1618[10]
2016–1720
2017–1817
2018–1919
2019–2013
2020–2116
2021–2218
2022–23Allan KawiyaExpress13
2023–24Muhammad ShabanKampala City17
Notes:

Multiple hat-tricks

Rank Country PlayerHat-tricks
1Olobo Bruno 3
2Emmanuel Okwi2
Peter Ssenyonjo
4Moses Aduni4
Oscar Kadenge
David Kalungi
Ismael Kigosi
Hamis Kitagenda
Hisborne Mundia
Andrew Nkurunungi
Augustine Nsumba
Cesar Okhuti
Denis Ojara
Allan Okello
Brian Omwony
Denis Onyango

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Richard M Kavuma . Ugandan football struggles to compete with English Premier League | Katine . theguardian.com . 2009-05-05 . 2013-12-01.
  2. Web site: FUFA Files: History of the Uganda Super League. Soccer256. 2014-01-08. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20101007081726/http://soccer256.com/Uganda%20Football%20League.html. 2010-10-07.
  3. Web site: Uganda Super League reaping from 1968 Sand Foundation . FUFA . 29 December 2011 . 2014-01-08.
  4. Web site: Origin of the Uganda Super League (USL) . USL Ltd . 2014-01-09.
  5. Web site: HB ZZIWA: Villa's 22–1 win over Akol killed Ugandan football . The Observer. 2014-01-09.
  6. Web site: Top 10 List: Match fixing episodes in Ugandan football . The Observer. 2014-01-09.
  7. Web site: 24 May 2020 . Collins Nabiswa . 20 May 2020 . OFFICIAL: Vipers SC declared Uganda Premier League champions after league is cancelled . futaa.com.
  8. Web site: Top 10 Strikers ever in the Ugandan Top Flight Football League. 28 September 2014. kawowo.com. 13 November 2018.
  9. Web site: FUFA Monthly . fufa.co.ug . 2015 . 2019-11-16.
  10. Web site: KCCA's Ochaya is 2015–16 UPL Most Valuable Player. 13 August 2016. upl.co.ug. 13 November 2018.
  11. Web site: The Legends: Uganda Super League top scorers since league inception . Kawowo.com . 2012-04-16 . 2014-01-24 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131202235558/http://www.kawowo.com/index.php/football/item/13388-the-legends-uganda-super-league-top-scorers-since-league-inception.html . 2013-12-02 .