[2] Kunda made his debut for Wanderers’ senior team as a right winger in the 1963 season at the age of 17, joining an already formidable front line made up of players like Samuel ‘Zoom’ Ndhlovu, Ron Jervis, Elijah Mwale, Laurent Chishala and Ken Simwanza as Wanderers unseated Zambian National Football League champions Roan United to take the title to Shinde Stadium at the end of the season.
[4] Wanderers’ fans loved their young striker and nicknamed him ‘Orlando,’ though Kunda later admitted that he had no idea about the origins of the name.
[7] Despite this, he was left out of the Zambian team during the country's independence tournament in October 1964 which featured Kenya, Ghana and Uganda, and Zambia lost all their games.
[8][9] Kunda once again led the line when Zambia faced off with Kenya once more for the Rothmans’ International Trophy at home in September 1965, and he held his own alongside veterans Ndhlovu, Jackie Sewell and Emment Kapengwe and scored once in the three match series which Zambia won despite an 8-8 aggregate score on account of having forced more corners than Kenya in the final game.
Unable to deal with a life outside football, Kunda quit his job as a Records Clerk with Mufulira Mine soon after hanging up his boots.
[13] In September 1986, an article in the Times of Zambia brought to light Kunda's plight in a village called Chamalawa 3 km from Mansa on the Samfya highway.