World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
32 meters, 125.2 kilometers per hour. 21st minute.
32 meters, 125.2 kilometers per hour. The 21st minute.
When Kevin Pina slipped the ball past the Uruguayan wall, Cape Verde had taken only two shots in the entire World Cup. The first missed. The second found the net. Since records began in 1966, no national team had ever scored their first ever World Cup goal with a direct free kick. Cape Verde tore that door open for all small nations.
Hard Rock Stadium, Miami, June 21st. Population 529,672—a county-level city by Chinese standards. This island nation delivered a goal in front of a two-time World Cup champion that made the data models shut up. FC Krasnodar later released a training video showing Pina repeatedly striking from that exact position and angle in daily practice. He did the same thing in the Russian Premier League, only nobody was watching.
Everything Uruguay could quantify before the match was on their side. 65% possession, 2.32 expected goals, 17 shots. Cape Verde's xG was just 0.89, with 12 shots. On paper, this shouldn't have been a contest. But football doesn't follow the expected goals script. Uruguay's 17 shots couldn't turn the scoreline around. They held the ball until their palms were sweating, and all they got in the end was a draw.
Pina's strike also breached a wall Uruguay had held for 19 years. The last time they conceded a direct free kick in a senior international major tournament was the 2007 Copa America, when Venezuela's Juan Arango scored from 25 meters out. In those 19 years, through countless squad rotations and tournaments, that wall remained unbroken. Pina is only the third African player to score a direct free kick in World Cup history—the first two were Tunisia's Raouf Bouzaiene against Belgium in 2002, and Nigeria's Kalu Uche against South Korea in 2010. For 16 years, no one had picked up the baton.
Ronald Araujo's equalizer in the 44th minute nearly rewrote the script. Agustín Canobbio scored in the 45+6th minute of first-half stoppage time, putting Uruguay 2-1 ahead. Then in the 61st minute, substitute Helio Varela made it 2-2—Varela's first international goal, and it was a last-minute equalizer. Araujo's numbers are even more impressive: he scored in both of his first two World Cup matches. The last Uruguayan to do that was Oscar Míguez, way back in 1954. Two "first in decades" milestones in a single match, and the winner was the team that had only taken two shots.
Cape Verde head coach Pedro Leão de Brito—known in the football world as "Bubista"—said before the match: "Once you step onto the pitch, many things become equal. No matter how big your opponent is on the world stage, a lot of national teams level out once they're on the field." Before the match, it sounded like motivational clichés. By the final whistle, every word had come true.
Pina broke down in tears during his post-match interview. "I don't know. I always said that at my age, reaching this point seems very difficult. I love playing football. I love what I do..." His voice trailed off. Born in 1997 in Praia, this defensive midfielder started his youth career at Cape Verde's local club Tchadense, moved to FC Krasnodar in the Russian Premier League in 2022, and carries a transfer market value of €5 million. On the World Cup stage, these credentials are the kind nobody gives a second glance. The Man of the Match trophy—the Michelob Ultra Superior Player of the Match—had his name engraved on it.
Cape Verde drew all three group stage matches: 0-0 against Spain, 2-2 against Uruguay, 0-0 against Saudi Arabia. Three points. They advanced as Group H runners-up. Since Chile in 1998, no team had escaped the group stage with three draws. They are also only the third African team in World Cup history to go unbeaten in their debut group stage, following Cameroon in 1982 and Senegal in 2002. Polymarket gave Cape Verde a 1% probability of remaining unbeaten in the group stage.
July 3rd, Miami. Their next opponent is the defending champions Argentina, with Lionel Messi on the pitch.