Inside Tusker FC’s Dramatic Title Collapse That Ended in a Humiliating 7-1 Loss to Sofapaka
By all standards, Tusker FC's 7-1 thrashing at the hands of Sofapaka was more than a defeat—it was a complete disintegration.
As Jack Onganya slotted in Sofapaka’s third goal, Charles Momanyi's visible frustration—slamming his hand into the turf and berating his teammates—summed up what many insiders have described as a psychological and tactical implosion.
The scoreline wasn't just staggering; it marked the heaviest defeat suffered by a top-tier Kenyan club in the modern era. More tellingly, it came just days after a 2-0 loss to FC Talanta, piling further pressure on a team that had once looked like serious contenders for the FKF Premier League title.
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So, what went wrong? Here are the three key factors behind Tusker’s collapse.
1. Mental Fragility: A Team That Fell Apart from Within
Charles Okere, the Tusker head coach, minced no words in his post-match interview on Azam TV.
“The worst performance ever. I do not know if it was psychological or what because the players were not able to do anything,” Okere said.
“Everything we tried was not going to plan so you wonder if it is deliberate because sometimes it looks like they were just willingly letting in goals—and these are players we have invested in.”
Behind the scenes, the sentiment was even harsher. Sources close to the dressing room, speaking under anonymity, described a team “completely disoriented” after conceding the second goal.
One technical bench insider went as far as calling the players' mentality and attitude “abysmal.”
And indeed, from that point on, the players looked shell-shocked—slow to track runners, hesitant in duels, and devoid of leadership or fight. Even as Tusker sit second on the log with 55 points—six behind leaders Kenya Police with two games remaining—Okere’s rallying cry felt hollow.
“No one has been crowned yet so we will push until the end,” he insisted. “But Tusker is a big team that needs character. We cannot be playing this kind of football.”
That character was nowhere to be seen at Dandora Stadium.
2. Tactical Naivety: Long Balls on Turf, No Midfield Control
I really don’t deserve to wear this jersey 😭😭💔💔 pic.twitter.com/1z0aKyQbZ3
— Erambo 27 (@Erambo27) May 18, 2025
The surface at Dandora Stadium is artificial turf, a pitch that punishes direct football. Yet Tusker continually opted to launch aimless balls over the top—turning possession over to Sofapaka repeatedly. The opponents, under the tactical direction of a well-drilled bench, capitalized on the turnovers by playing quick, controlled football to expose Tusker’s porous shape.
A perfect example came during the build-up to Wayne Otieno’s goal—Tusker’s long ball was easily intercepted by the Sofapaka fullback, who initiated a smooth one-two exchange that carved through a disjointed Tusker defense.
Tusker’s midfield offered little cover. Denis Iguma, a veteran with Uganda Cranes pedigree, was a glaring weak point. Time and again, he was isolated under pressure, with little support from teammates like Chrispine Erambo, who failed to drop in to provide outlets or screen the space.
The fifth goal encapsulated this dysfunction. Iguma, dropping between the center-backs, received a backpass from Momanyi only to find himself surrounded and unsupported. With no options, he lost possession, conceded a penalty, and moments later watched Sofapaka convert from the spot.
Even in the dying minutes, Tusker hadn’t learned their lesson. Onganya robbed Iguma once again in the 85th minute, exchanged passes with Edward Omondi, and rifled home to complete his hat trick—an indictment of Tusker’s inability to adapt.
3. Flawed Recruitment and the Shapan Siwa Mistake
Beyond the pitch, Tusker’s transfer strategy has also come under fire. Losing Shapan Siwa—a player who had already registered nine assists by mid-season—was a blow the team never recovered from.
Pulse Sports understands that Siwa was open to extending his stay in Ruaraka and was even willing to accept a pay cut. However, the club instead brought in Denis Iguma, whose underwhelming performances have not justified the faith placed in him.
Siwa’s creativity and ball retention were sorely missed on a day when Tusker couldn’t string three passes together under pressure. His ability to carry the ball and link play was exactly what the team needed against Sofapaka’s aggressive press and rapid transitions.
The decision to let him go now looks like one of the season’s most consequential missteps. It also has not helped top scorer Ryan Ogam has been ruled out with a knee injury.
Tusker’s collapse at Dandora was not a fluke. It was the result of deeper structural issues—mentally brittle players, tactical confusion, and recruitment misfires. The 7-1 result was merely the surface-level symptom of a club in distress at every level.
With two matches remaining, the title might still be mathematically possible, but based on their current trajectory, Tusker have far bigger problems to solve than chasing the crown.
This wasn’t just a bad day at the office—it was a complete organizational failure.