World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
Cape Verde's national population is 525,000, not enough to fill a Bernabéu. This team came to play in the World Cup, finishing three matches with a record of 0 goals scored, 0 goals conceded, and three draws. Against defending champion Spain, the opponent fired 23 shots with 8 on target, yet couldn't make a sound. They turn ball possession into a rosary, then drag the giants into the mud with defense—that's Cape Verde's philosophy of survival.
Cape Verde's national population is 525,000, not enough to fill a Bernabéu. This team came to play in the World Cup, delivering a ledger of 0 goals, 0 conceded, and 3 draws in three matches. Against defending champions Spain, the opponent unleashed 23 shots with 8 on target, yet they couldn't even make a sound. Holding possession like prayer beads and dragging giants into the mud through defense—that's Cape Verde's philosophy of survival.
Nine out of ten African teams showed up, a 90% survival rate that sounds like a Great Leap Forward. But digging into the group stage totals, this gilding flakes off. Infantino expanded the World Cup to 48 teams, and the African Football Confederation pocketed 9 direct slots plus a playoff berth, which DR Congo squeezed through via the back door of the playoffs. The quotas were inflated, but the genuine win rate didn't keep up. Across 30 group matches, African teams won just 8, a 26.7% win rate. Compare that to Europe (16 teams, 13 advancing) and South America (6 teams, 5 advancing), and among Africa's 9 advancing teams, not a single group leader emerged. They're all second-place finishers or third-place teams scraping by on tiebreakers.
The dividends taste different in different mouths. DR Congo last touched World Cup grass in 1974, when the country was called Zaire, losing all three matches, conceding 9 goals to Yugoslavia, and leaving with 0 goals scored. Fifty-two years later, Yoane Wissa headed open Portugal's door in Group K, then scored a brace against Uzbekistan to reverse a 3-1 deficit. After the match, Wissa confessed to the camera: "My whole life flashed before my eyes; I, like the whole country, have been waiting for decades." On the other side, Tunisia lost everything. Three losses, 10 goals conceded—a 1-5 thrashing by Sweden and a 4-0 whitewash by Japan. Before the group stage even ended, the federation sacked coach Hervé Renard, cutting losses faster than trimming fat.
Old powerhouses are living off past glories and repaying favors. Morocco went 32 matches unbeaten across competitions, with 2 wins and 1 draw in the group stage, extending their World Cup group unbeaten streak to 6 matches—beating Scotland 1-0, crushing Haiti 4-2, and even tangling with Brazil. But coach Regragui, who led them to the 2022 semifinals, abruptly resigned three months before the World Cup, leaving behind a note: "The team needs new faces." The system remains, the foundation holds, and the coaching change didn't break any bones. Over in Egypt, Salah finally spat out 92 years of frustration. A 3-1 win over New Zealand, with Salah scoring and providing a corner assist, secured Egypt's first-ever World Cup victory. At 32, having never won a match in two previous World Cups, if he hadn't unburdened himself, his national team career would've been a joke.
The 32-team bracket is set. Cape Verde heads to Miami to face Argentina—525,000 against 46 million. Cape Verde defender Pico Lopes says there's a word on the island, "morabeza," meaning "no pressure." DR Congo takes on England, Morocco plays the Netherlands, Algeria faces Switzerland, Egypt versus Australia, Ghana against Colombia, South Africa versus Canada, and Ivory Coast plays Norway.
Not a single African team enters the knockout stage with a group-leading swagger. Expansion gave them chips to sit at the table, but the knockout rounds don't recognize quotas, only bayonets. Can Cape Verde drag Argentina into a 0-0 quagmire? Can DR Congo show England what a 52-year-starved wolf looks like? All in the next 90 minutes.