There is a dangerous line every football club must never cross, the moment supporters stop supporting and start competing with the team. Sadly, Gor Mahia FC is now flirting with that line.
What was once a beautiful, organic culture of song, rhythm, and unity has slowly morphed into a struggle for dominance among choir factions. The problem is no longer about atmosphere. It is about ego. And ego has no place in the stands when the team is fighting on the pitch.
Footballers draw energy from unity. They feed off one voice, one purpose, one badge. When that voice fractures, confusion replaces motivation.

The recent scenes during the match against KCB FC were troubling, not because of the football, but because of what was happening around it. Boos aimed at players. Not for poor performance. Not for lack of effort. But for failing to acknowledge a specific section of fans.
That should alarm every true K’Ogalo supporter.
Since when did Gor Mahia become a stage where players must perform gratitude rituals to avoid hostility? Since when did winning matches stop being enough? This mindset is not just entitled—it is destructive.
- The choir is not the club.
- The choir is not the brand.
- The choir is not bigger than the badge.

Gor Mahia’s identity was built on sacrifice, resilience, and collective pride. Players sing the anthem out of respect and connection, not obligation. The moment that tradition is weaponised, it loses its meaning.
Great clubs protect their players. They create hostile environments for opponents, not for their own dressing room. If fans turn into judges instead of supporters, morale suffers, unity cracks, and performance eventually dips. History has taught us this lesson repeatedly.
K’Ogalo does not need louder choirs. It needs wiser supporters.
Support the team. Sing for the badge. Celebrate the win. Leave the spotlight to the players who earn it with sweat and bruises.
Because when fans fight each other, Gor Mahia loses, even when the scoreboard says otherwise.
Disclaimer – The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not represent the official stance of this publication or its editorial team.
