Uganda limped to 131/9 in their full 20 overs, a total that looked vulnerable the moment Ssesazi fell for 33 off 26. Robinson Obuya's 28 from 28 balls epitomized the sluggishness—Uganda mustered just 6.55 runs per over, a death bowling performance that screamed desperation. Juma Miyagi and Riazat Ali Shah picked one each but conceded only 44 runs across their combined 8 overs, proof that Eagles XI's seam unit dominated.
The hosts dismantled the chase in 13.2 overs. Nicol Loftie-Eaton struck 72 off just 36 balls—a strike rate of 200—and Dylan Leicher's 48 off 27 provided brutal acceleration. Together they added 121 off 62 deliveries, the powerplay was merely formality. Uganda never recovered from Loftie-Eaton's onslaught; the Eagles' openers scored at 11.5 per over while Uganda labored at 6.55.
The bowling disparities told the complete story. Loftie-Eaton returned 2/15, Leicher 2/24. Uganda's batsmen couldn't manufacture partnerships or momentum. Ssesazi's 33 stood as their only decent effort. Eagles XI won by eight wickets, the margin reflecting Uganda's one-dimensional cricket—a tour that yielded neither resistance nor spark. Namibia's youngsters exposed a touring side short on power-hitting depth.