Overview:
So, what happened when Vipers actually had to play football on home soil? Same Old Story!

Kitara FC booked its place in the Uganda Cup final after grinding out a hard-earned 1-1 draw with Vipers SC at St. Mary’s Stadium, Kitende on Friday.
For the Venoms, it was another chapter in a familiar saga: talk a big game, play a small one, and hope the center man in black rides to the rescue.
Let’s call a spade a spade. The script was as predictable as a rerun. After two goalless snoozefests in the Uganda Cup semifinal first leg and the league meeting, Vipers spent weeks running their mouths online and in the stands.
“Kitara Park the bus”, “Kitara are small”, and “Kitende is a graveyard”. All sound and fury, signifying very little, from a club that mistakes possession for progress and students’ noise for dominance.
So, what happened when they actually had to play football on home soil? The same old story.
90 Minutes of Kick-and-Complain Football
Vipers’ game plan was as transparent as glass: slow the tempo to a crawl, commit professional fouls, and swarm the referee at the slightest provocation.
If yapping & imitating class were Olympic sports, they would be on the podium. What they dress up as “grit” looked more like a desperate rearguard action to avoid creating a clear-cut chance from open play.

For a club with its financial muscle and pedigree, you’d expect more than a carousel of passes at the back and hopeful punts that landed straight in Kitara’s laps. Meanwhile, Kitara came with a blueprint, stuck to it with discipline and composure, and showed more attacking intent away from home than Vipers managed on their own pitch.
The Referee Department had a Busy Shift
It wouldn’t be a Vipers home fixture without the obligatory 3-minute huddle around the center man, exerting pressure. In their eyes, every Kitara tackle merited a red card, every set piece against them was a conspiracy, and every decision was proof of a plot.
Like what happened in the league match, the players and bench spent more time litigating with the officials than threatening the goal. The dust had barely settled, and already tongues are wagging after they clawed back an equalizer from the spot to level matters that left football fans all over the country fuming.
The talking point came early in the second half when the referee pointed to the spot after forward Yunus Sentamu dived in the 18-yard box.
Talisman Karim Watambala stepped up and converted, levelling matters and snatching a share of the spoils. For the away support, it felt like the game had been taken out of their hands, a decision that cut against the run of play and turned the tide when the match was hanging in the balance.
Controversies at Kitende are not about to stop at the whistle, visiting supporters claim this isn’t the first time they’ve been given the cold shoulder at the ground. Word on the terraces is that Vipers have a habit of getting under the skin of traveling fans, with an air of arrogance that rubs people up the wrong way.

More than that, morale boosters — the band, and banners that give away ends their voice — were one time denied entry. For many, it feels like an attempt to silence the opposition before a ball is even kicked, taking the fight out of the away support and leaving the stadium tilted firmly in one direction.
On the pitch, Vipers will argue they took their chance when it came. Off it, they’re walking a fine line. If the club wants to build a reputation beyond results, they’ll need to remember that football lives and dies on atmosphere — and you can’t bottle that up and keep it for one side only.
At Kitende, “home advantage” seems to translate to “advantage with the whistle”. Even that couldn’t manufacture a win. When the football isn’t there, no amount of referee wrangling can conjure a result out of thin air.

Kitara: Quiet Work, Thunderous Results
While Vipers were busy with the mockery and mind games, Kitara did what they’ve done all season: stayed organized, kept their composure, and took their chance when it came. A 1-1 draw away to Vipers is no fluke. It’s the fruit of a side that respects the game more than the theatrics surrounding it.
So, to Vipers and their faithful: enjoy the memes, polish the excuses, and keep pointing fingers anywhere but inward, ugly precedents are yet to bite you.
And for a team that’s been crowing since February, getting sent packing at Kitende is a bitter pill to swallow.
