Sunday served up excessive drama and uncooked ardour as Ssingo County held off Bugerere, whereas Buweekula mounted an exhilarating comeback to crush Kyaggwe’s hopes of a maiden remaining look. The second leg of the Masaza Cup semi-finals delivered a spectacle worthy of a grand finale.
At a charged Mityana Ssaza Grounds, Ssingo—defending a slim 2-1 first-leg lead—locked horns with Bugerere in a tense tactical showdown. The battle grew so intense that each side ended with 10 males after a pink card apiece. Ssingo, fiercely defending their turf, struck the crossbar late within the match and matched Bugerere’s aggression with willpower. The goalless draw on the day was sufficient to seal a 2-1 mixture win, putting Ssingo on the point of a historic third title.
The electrical ambiance was elevated by the presence of dignitaries together with Minister Judith Nabakooba, MP Hon. Francis Zaake, and Buganda’s Owek. Joseph Kawuuki.
Amid the celebration, Grace Navvubya, Pilsner King Distribution Consultant for Mityana, expressed her pleasure:
At present, we noticed the guts of a champion,” she stated. “The resilience of Ssingo—enjoying with ten males and standing tall—is the true spirit of soccer. As Pilsner King, we’re proud to face with the followers all the best way to Nakivubo.”
Over in Mukono, the opposite semi-final was delayed by a heavy downpour—an omen for the storm that adopted. Buweekula, trailing 1-0 from the primary leg, discovered their saviour in Semanda Colline, who netted only a minute into the second half to stage the tie. After a 1-0 full-time rating pressured a 2-2 mixture, the conflict went to penalties. There, two expensive misses from Kyaggwe gamers noticed Buweekula edge a 4-3 shootout victory, silencing the once-vibrant Kyaggwe devoted.
Now, the query looms:Will Ssingo stay a resilient fortress, or can Buweekula proceed their storm-slaying cost to Masaza Cup glory?
The stage is about for a blockbuster remaining on November 1st at Nakivubo Stadium.








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