Back to the drawing board as Kenya Simbas fail in World Cup bid

Rugby
By Washington Onyango | Jul 15, 2025
Kenya Simbas players react against Uganda Cranes during the 2024 Elgon Cup Tournament at the RFUEA Grounds in Nairobi on November 09, 2024. [Stafford Ondego, Standard]

The elephant in the room can no longer be ignored and Kenya must overhaul its rugby development system if the country is ever to play at the World Cup.

For far too long, the national 15s team, Kenya Simbas, has relied on short-term solutions, hurried training camps, and last-minute preparations in pursuit of a dream that continues to slip further out of reach.

If the goal is to qualify for the 2031 Rugby World Cup, then the work must start now—not in 2029 according to many rugby followers.

They say the Kenya Rugby Union (KRU) must come up with a long-term plan that prioritises player development, talent pathways, and regular international exposure.

According to them, a solution begins with assembling a young, competitive team early, keeping them in long-term camp, and playing high-quality international test matches against top-tier rugby nations for at least five years.

Countries like South Africa, the reigning world champions, don’t wait for tournaments to prepare. They play regularly against top teams.

Their players are nurtured through elite school and academy systems that produce world-class talent every year.

Kenya, too, has a rich school rugby culture. Schools like Kakamega High, St Mary’s Yala, Koyonzo, Vihiga, Kisii, and Butula continue to produce raw talent. But without a national framework to harness this potential, many of these players go unnoticed.

If they aren’t picked up by well-funded Kenya Cup sides like Kabras Sugar, KCB, or Menengai Oilers, their rugby dreams often fade.

“It is my prayer that Rugby World Cup qualification doesn’t get forgotten again and only brought up a year before it’s time. I also pray that the new, energetic, corruption-free KRU board is coherent enough to put a clear plan in place now, and ensure the Pathways Manager does his job, and that Kenya is fully prepared when the next qualification opportunity comes around,” one staunch rugby follower said on social media.

“A proper grassroots program, a clear Pathways Manager role, and consistent funding from KRU are vital. Setting aside a budget to run regional clinics and national academies, targeting players as young as 18, will build a strong future core for the Simbas.”

On Sunday, the Simbas’ hopes of qualifying for the 2027 Rugby World Cup were ended after a painful 29-23 loss to Zimbabwe in the Rugby Africa Cup semi-finals at the Mandela National Stadium in Uganda.

In a match Kenya could have won, Zimbabwe’s Sables were sharper, hungrier, and better prepared. The defeat means Kenya will now play Algeria in the third-place playoff on July 19.

This year’s preparation echoed previous campaigns—another month-long training camp in South Africa, another tournament full of hope, and another heartbreak.

The failure to plan has once again come back to haunt Kenya.

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