The smallest nation in Group H arrived in Atlanta as 12-to-1 underdogs and left with a point against the European champions. Was it a lucky fluke, or proof that Cape Verde deserves a spot on this stage?
On their very first day at a World Cup, Cape Verde accomplished something most of the planet believed impossible. They held Spain, one of the top favorites to win the entire tournament, to a 0-0 draw at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on Monday. A nation of just over 500,000 people and the third smallest ever to reach the finals, they frustrated a star-studded La Roja for 90 minutes and nearly stole all three points in the dying moments.
This was not smash-and-grab luck. It was organization, courage, and a goalkeeper who delivered an unforgettable performance. The serious question worth asking is clear: is Cape Verde actually far stronger than we assumed?
Spain dominated possession as expected, piling up the numbers with 27 shots, seven on target, and an expected goals figure of 2.29. On most nights, that wins comfortably. On this night, it hit a wall. That wall had a name: Vozinha, the Cape Verde goalkeeper who turned 40 just two weeks before the tournament. He made seven saves, several at close range, to keep his country’s first World Cup sheet clean. In front of him, a disciplined back line led by Diney Borges and Ireland-born Roberto “Pico” Lopes snuffed out everything Spain threw at them.
Spain coach Luis de la Fuente made things more complicated by leaving teenage sensation Lamine Yamal on the bench until around the 70th minute. He later confirmed Yamal was fit but not ready to start, and Spain badly lacked natural width without him. By the time Yamal, Dani Olmo, and Nico Williams arrived, Cape Verde had their shape and their belief. Borges even had a late header to win it, saved by Unai Simón.
The honest answer is yes, but with context. Cape Verde did not back into this World Cup. Under coach Pedro “Bubista” Brito, they came through African qualifying with seven wins, two draws, and a single defeat, finishing four points clear of footballing heavyweight Cameroon. They avoided the inter-confederation playoffs entirely. That is not the record of a team that got lucky with a draw.
They also have genuine professional pedigree spread across European leagues. The squad is built around players at clubs like Trabzonspor, Shamrock Rovers, Columbus Crew, and more, with goalscorer Dailon Livramento proving decisive in qualifying. This is a tight-knit, well-coached group that knows exactly what it is: hard to break down, dangerous on the counter, and fearless.
The result also lands a wider point. Critics argued the expansion of the World Cup from 32 to 48 teams would water down the tournament. Cape Verde answered that on the pitch. While fellow debutants Curaçao were thrashed 7-1 by Germany, the Blue Sharks became just the seventh team in World Cup history to avoid defeat on their debut.
A point against Spain is historic, but Group H does not get easier. Cape Verde still face Uruguay and Saudi Arabia, and they will need goals, not just clean sheets, to have a real shot at the knockout rounds. Spain, for their part, remain favorites to top the group once Yamal hits full fitness.
But anyone still writing Cape Verde off as tournament tourists is not paying attention. They are organized, experienced, and brave, and they have already shown they can live with the best team in the world. Stronger than we thought? On this evidence, absolutely.
