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Kenya faces a sporting crisis as the lack of FIFA-standard stadiums forces the national team to play home matches abroad, sparking outrage over wasted funds and poor planning.

It is a national embarrassment that the Harambee Stars, the pride of a nation of 55 million, must beg for a pitch in Malawi to play their "home" matches.
The looming crisis of sports venues in Kenya has reached a boiling point. With the closure of the Moi International Sports Centre (Kasarani) and Nyayo National Stadium for renovations ahead of the 2027 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) and the African Nations Championship (CHAN), the country has been left without a single FIFA-accredited facility. The result? Kenya is effectively a homeless sporting nation, forced to export its matches—and the revenue that comes with them—to foreign soils.
Writing for the Daily Nation, critics argue that this situation is "despicable" and a damning indictment of successive governments. Billions of shillings have purportedly been poured into stadium upgrades over the last decade, yet the return on investment is invisible. The ghost of the 2018 CHAN, stripped from Kenya due to unready venues, haunts the current preparations. The EACC is currently investigating the loss of Ksh1.5 billion from that debacle, but for the fans, justice is seeing a ball kicked on Kenyan grass.
The decision to host World Cup qualifiers in Lilongwe is not just a sporting failure; it is an economic one. Hosting a match involving heavyweights like Côte d'Ivoire brings in thousands of fans, fills hotels, and boosts local businesses. By outsourcing the venue, Kenya is outsourcing the profits. "We will have lost revenue and denied our fans an opportunity to see the top stars in action," pundits note.
While the renovations at Kasarani, Nyayo, and Bukhungu are necessary, the timing and lack of contingency planning expose a systemic incompetence. The Ministry of Sports is now in a race against time, promising that the Talanta Sports City will be the game-changer. But Kenyans, bitten many times by the "stadiums in six months" promise, remain skeptical.
The crisis also highlights the failure of devolution to address sports infrastructure. County governments have largely neglected their stadiums, waiting for handouts from the national treasury. The few exceptions, like Kakamega’s Bukhungu Stadium, show what is possible with political will. But one regional stadium is not enough to carry the weight of a nation’s sporting ambitions.
As the cement mixers churn at Kasarani, the clock is ticking. The government must ensure that this time, the money results in world-class facilities, not just fresh coats of paint on crumbling concrete. Until then, Kenya remains a giant with nowhere to play.
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