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There are football disputes that simmer quietly in the background, and then there are the ones that follow club officials home at night. For AFC Leopards, the Kasarani land saga is firmly the latter — and a senior figure at the club has finally said, out loud, what that pressure actually feels like. According to Pulse Sports, the official's message to Ingwe faithful was blunt: drop the issue, because 'I don't want to die early.'
You don't get that kind of candour from a press release. When a senior figure at one of Kenya's most storied clubs tells supporters — publicly — that a long-running grievance is costing him sleep, and possibly years, it tells you everything about how deep this particular wound runs.
The Kasarani land dispute centres on a plot of land near the Kasarani Stadium complex in Nairobi that AFC Leopards have long claimed a stake in — an asset the club's supporters view as critical to its long-term infrastructure and financial footing. The dispute has been a festering sore at the club for years, surfacing at every AGM and refusing to be quietly filed away. The official — identified in Pulse Sports' report as a senior club figure but not named by title or in full — made his plea publicly, invoking his own mortality to make the point. A second independent source corroborating the specific remarks has not yet been identified; editors should confirm additional sourcing before final publication.
This is what fan grievances look like when they go unresolved long enough. They stop being administrative headaches and start becoming personal ones. AFC Leopards carry the kind of supporter passion that would make most European clubs envious — the Ingwe faithful are loud, loyal, and deeply invested in every corner of the club's affairs. That same intensity, when directed at an issue with no clean resolution in sight, can be exhausting for the people sitting in the boardroom.
The official isn't the first administrator at a Kenyan club to find himself caught between institutional inertia and a fanbase demanding answers. He probably won't be the last.
Whether fans take the plea on board is another matter entirely. Telling a passionate supporter base to move on from a land dispute involving club assets is a big ask — and the fact that a senior figure felt the need to make it so publicly suggests the internal pressure has reached a point where silence was no longer an option.
One thing is certain: when a club official says 'I don't want to die early' in reference to a fan issue, the issue is not going away quietly. The question is whether it gets resolved, or just gets louder.
There are football disputes that simmer quietly in the background, and then there are the ones that follow club officials home at night. For AFC Leopards, the Kasarani land saga is firmly the latter
Fontes
Pulse Sports
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