Nobody at this World Cup has won fewer matches than Cape Verde. Nobody has lost fewer either.
Played three, drawn three, still in the tournament. It is the kind of line that looks like a misprint, and it belongs to a chain of Atlantic islands whose entire population — roughly half a million — would not fill the biggest stadiums at this World Cup six times over.
The group nobody gave them
Consider the assignment. World Cup debutants, drawn against Spain, Uruguay and Saudi Arabia. The reigning European champions, a two-time world champion, and the team that beat Argentina in 2022. The polite expectation was three defeats and a warm ovation at the airport.
Instead, the Blue Sharks opened by holding Spain — Lamine Yamal, champions of Europe, all of it — to a goalless draw that grew less flukish with every minute. Then they traded punches with Uruguay in a 2–2 thriller. Then, needing a point against Saudi Arabia to stay alive, they defended a 0–0 like men guarding the islands themselves.
Three points. No defeats. Third place in the group, and one of the eight best third-place records in the tournament. The new format’s most-mocked back door has produced its best story.
What half a million sounds like
Cape Verde’s football has always travelled — its diaspora in Lisbon, Rotterdam and Boston outnumbers the islands themselves, and this squad was assembled across three continents. That is not a weakness. It is the whole point. Every draw this month has been a family reunion conducted at full volume, from Praia to the stands of American stadiums adopted as home ends.
They are the second-smallest nation ever to reach a World Cup. On current evidence, nobody has told them.
And now, this
The reward for all that defiance is the cruellest fixture in sport and the greatest night in Cape Verdean history, which on Friday will be the same thing: Argentina. The world champions. Lionel Messi, 39 years old and still rearranging record books, in what everyone quietly understands is his last World Cup.
Every logical instrument says this ends Friday. But logic also said Spain would score against them, and Uruguay would beat them, and Saudi Arabia would send them home. The Blue Sharks have spent a month making probability blink first.
One more draw, and penalties. Go on. You’ve thought about it too.