FKF calls for data-driven scouting as nationwide scouting reforms get underway
Football Kenya Federation (FKF) Development Director Francis Kimanzi leads a delegation of scouts during a past nationwide scouting reforms initiative backed by FIFA. Photo courtesy
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The first phase of Kenya’s nationwide scouting reform has
officially concluded, with 30 scouts from the Central Region completing a three-day Talent Identification Training Workshop at the Kenya Institute of Special
Education in Nairobi.
The training, conducted under the FIFA Talent Development
Scheme, focused on modern scouting methods and structured talent identification
systems to strengthen the country’s football development pathway.
The workshop was facilitated by FIFA Talent Development expert
Faisal Chibsah and coordinated by the Football Kenya Federation Technical
Department. Participants underwent intensive sessions designed to standardize
how talent is identified, assessed and monitored across regions.
The objective of the program is to help Kenya build a reliable,
data driven scouting network to remain competitive at international level as part
of a broader strategy to prepare a strong national side for the 2027 FIFA U-17
World Cup.
By equipping scouts
with modern tools and a unified framework, FKF aims to close the gap between
grassroots football and elite national teams.
The federation is
banking on trained regional scouts to consistently identify promising players
early and guide them into structured development pathways.
With Cohort 1
completed, focus now shifts to the Coast. Cohort 2 begins on Monday, March 2,
in Mombasa as the nationwide rollout continues. The program will later move to
Kisumu to ensure full national coverage.
The federation’s call is straightforward: strengthen scouting structures now to secure Kenya’s football future.


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