The aftermath of the Mashemeji Derby has once again shifted focus from football to officiating—and this time, the spotlight is firmly driven by Boniface Ambani.
Following Gor Mahia’s 1-0 win over AFC Leopards, Ambani took to social media to question refereeing decisions. But the bigger question is: is he right, or is this just the usual post-derby frustration?
The short anwr: arty Yes, btot the full story
Ambani isn’t speaking in a vacuum. Concerns about officiating in Kenyan football have existed for years. From inconsistent decisions to lack of transparency, many stakeholders, fans, coaches, and administrators, have raised similar complaints.
So when Ambani points to “poor officiating,” he taps into a widely shared sentiment.
But here’s the part that needs honesty: not every controversial decision equals bad officiating, and not every defeat can be pinned on referees.
TheDerby Itself: Did officiating decide the game?
Looking at the match objectively, Gor Mahia were the more organized and effective side. They controlled large portions of the game and created clearer chances.
AFC Leopards, on the other hand, struggled to impose themselves consistently in attack.
Even if there were questionable calls, there is little clear evidence that a single refereeing decision directly decided the outcome. Gor Mahia still did enough to earn the win. That matters.
Why Ambani’s voestill mater
Even if the derby result wasn’t purely about refereeing, Ambani’s concerns shouldn’t be dismissed.
When a club chairman publicly questions officiating, it reflects a broader trust issue in the system overseen by Football Kenya Federation.
And this is where Ambani may be right:
- Officiating standards in the league are often inconsistent
- Accountability for referees is rarely visible
- Communication around decisions is almost non-existent
- These are structural issues, not just match-day emotions.
The danger of normalizing blame
If every big match ends with officials being blamed, it creates a culture where:
- Teams avoid accountability for performance
- Fans lose trust even when decisions are correct
- Referees operate under fear rather than authority
That’s not how a healthy football ecosystem works.
So, is Ambani right?
Yes, on the bigger picture, but entirely, on the specific match narrative. Ambani is right to highlight long-standing officiating concerns. But framing the derby outcome primarily around refereeing risks oversimplifying what happened on the pitch.
The Mashemeji Derby should have been about quality, rivalry, and performance. Instead, once again, officiating is the loudest conversation. Until Football Kenya Federation addresses transparency, training, and accountability in refereeing, voices like Boniface Ambani will keep getting louder.
And not without reason.
