You can sack a coach, but you can never sack the spirit of K’Ogalo.
On Tuesday night at Kasarani, as Gor Mahia tore Kariobangi Sharks apart in a ruthless 4–1 demolition, one familiar face stood out in the stands — former coach Sinisa Mihic, cheering, clapping, and living every moment like he never left.
The Green Army marched, the goals flowed, and unity returned among K’Ogalo officials and right there in the middle of it all was Mihic, wearing the smile of a man whose heart still beats green and white.

Mihic’s time at Gor Mahia may have been short, but it was never ordinary. His tenure was filled with fire, fights, passion, and belief. He clashed with the technical bench, sent staff packing over alleged insubordination, then reconciled like warriors who had fought and survived the same battle.
But the real breaking point came after the controversial Murang’a Seal draw in May 2025. Two stone-wall penalties denied. Poor officiating. A boiling coach. From that moment, the relationship cracked — and soon, Mihic was gone.
Yet on Tuesday, as Ben Stanley Omondi, Ebenezer Adukwaw, Samuel Kapane, and Felix Oluoch lit up Kasarani, Mihic was back — not on the touchline, but in spirit, in song, and in belief.
Some say Juogi works in mysterious ways. Others whispered that instructions were still coming from somewhere in the stands. We may never know at what minute Juogi pressed the buttons.
What we know is this:
Once Gor Mahia enters your blood, it never leaves.
The badge stays.
The fire remains.
And the spirit of K’Ogalo always finds its way back home. 💚🤍🔥
