Cape Verde drew Uruguay 2-2 at a US venue on Sunday 21 June to stay unbeaten through two matches on their World Cup debut. Kevin Pina opened the scoring on 21 minutes with a 32-metre direct free-kick, the first World Cup goal in the island nation's history and, per the statistics provider Opta, the first debut World Cup goal from a direct free-kick since 1966 1. Helio Varela levelled at 2-2 on 61 minutes, 136 seconds after coming on, the fastest goal by an African substitute since Roger Milla in 1994. Cape Verde, an Atlantic archipelago of roughly 550,000 people, came to the United States as the smallest nation in the 48-team field.
The numbers describe a team that did not arrive to make up the numbers. Cape Verde have conceded just five fouls across two games, fewer than any side at the tournament, which matters more than it reads: a defence that does not give away free-kicks denies a possession-heavy opponent its main route to chances. Their goalless opening draw with Spain now looks like the start of a run rather than a one-off, and they follow Senegal in 2002 as the only debutants unbeaten after two matches.
Group H reopened because of a correction. Spain's win over Saudi Arabia, first reported as 1-0 , was in fact 4-0: Lamine Yamal on 10 minutes, Mikel Oyarzabal twice inside four first-half minutes, and a Hassan Al-Tambakti own goal after the break 2. That margin sends Spain to 4 points and all but eliminates Saudi Arabia, who have lost twice with no realistic route through. The group now reads Spain four, Uruguay and Cape Verde two each, Saudi Arabia nil. Curaçao, another debutant, had taken their own first World Cup point days earlier . What keeps Cape Verde alive is structural: the round of 32 admits the four best third-placed teams, a slot that did not exist under the old 32-team format and would have sent a side on two points home.
