
Cape Verde’s Debut Draw Against Spain Jars World Cup’s Old Order
The Atlantic archipelago’s goalless stalemate with the former champions mirrors a tournament where Italy and Russia are absent, and diaspora talent redraws football’s map.
The opening week of the 2026 World Cup delivered its first shock on the pitch when Cape Verde, making their tournament debut, held Spain to a scoreless draw. The island nation of barely half a million inhabitants, who qualified for the first time only this year, absorbed waves of Spanish pressure with a compact defensive block and quick counter-attacks. Spain, despite dominating possession, could not find a way through a goalkeeper and backline drawn largely from European lower leagues and academies. The result left the group wide open and reverberated from Tehran to Buenos Aires.
That a team with no professional domestic league could muzzle La Roja underscored the transformative forces reshaping this expanded 48-team tournament. Cape Verde’s squad is typical of the new football nomads: 62 per cent of its players were born abroad, mostly in Portugal and France, according to Football Observatory data. This diaspora-fuelled rise echoes Morocco’s run to the semi-finals in 2022 and Curaçao’s qualification this year with 96 per cent foreign-born players. Meanwhile, four-time champions Italy are missing a third straight finals, a wound still raw in a country where sports dailies have derided the tournament’s quality and the “rosicano” (gnawing resentment) of commentators grows louder. Russia, too, remains excluded under FIFA suspension, with former Zenit defender Nicolas Lomberts voicing hope for a swift return.
The globalised talent pool is altering the balance of power. Japan’s victory over Germany in the opening match of the last World Cup has matured into a consistent top-20 ranking thanks to a decades-long youth development project. Economists note that wealth and population explain much of football success, but culture and diaspora networks increasingly challenge that model. Viewed from London, Spain’s stutter fits a broader pattern: only eight nations have ever lifted the trophy, yet the number of competitive teams is growing. It is not just on-field performance—the tournament’s economic ripples are palpable. In Colombia, surveys show 79 per cent of fans dream of attending a final, willing to spend upwards of $10,000; Brazilian bars are seeing a 76 per cent sales surge; while in Argentina, the passion is so all-consuming that even a political scandal could not divert attention from the first matchday.
For Italy, the summer is a quiet agony. Supporters are adrift, contemplating which team to adopt—Portugal offers emotional highs, Carlo Ancelotti’s Brazil a serene logic—but the Azzurri’s absence fuels a creeping despair. The Italian federation has yet to settle on a technical project, and the systemic failures of youth development remain. Spain, meanwhile, must quickly regroup before facing a resurgent Japan, who opened with a composed win over Tunisia. Cape Verde’s next fixture, against a Mexico side that ground out a 1-0 win over South Korea thanks to a goalkeeper error, will test whether their defensive resilience can become a springboard or a one-off. The 2026 World Cup is already proving that the gap between the storied and the emerging is narrower than ever, and that the game’s true globalisation is accelerating with each match.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 3 languages
Continental European press laments Italy's third consecutive World Cup absence, criticizing the expansion to 48 teams as an overreach that widens borders but sidelines traditional football powerhouses. There is skepticism toward premature optimism after wins against minnows, and nostalgia for what Italy could have contributed. The tone mixes indignation with a hint of revanchism against a format that penalizes historic nations.
Latin American press covers the World Cup with a dual lens: on one hand, it highlights economic opportunities for businesses, citing concrete revenue increases; on the other, it offers an ironic take on how football passion can blur social and political realities. There is a pragmatic focus on consumption patterns alongside critical warnings against letting the tournament distract from larger issues.
Related articles
US and Iran Begin Technical Talks in Switzerland as Strait of Hormuz Dispute Flares
8 languages · 30 outlets
SportSerena Williams Accepts Final Wildcard to Launch Singles Comeback at Wimbledon
9 languages · 20 outlets
Geopolitics & PoliticsTrump threatens Iran with new strikes amid Swiss peace talks
6 languages · 21 outlets