World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
2026 USA Canada Mexico World Cup Group H first round. When the final whistle blew, the 0 0 on the scoreboard felt like a cheap joke.
2026 USA-Canada-Mexico World Cup Group H first round. When the final whistle blew, the 0-0 on the scoreboard felt like a cheap joke.
Before the match, the outside world almost unanimously saw Spain as the undisputed winner. In the eyes of actuaries, this was no different from leaking exam questions before a closed-book test. Cape Verde, making their World Cup debut, had even their slim chance of earning a single point compressed to single digits. The suited strategists didn't see this as a football match; it was meant to be a ceremonial coronation.
But football doesn't believe in models.
In the tunnel after the game, the sense of disconnect was more glaring than the scoreline. Cape Verde's players didn't care about so-called dignity. They hugged tightly with their teammates, who were covered in grass and mud and might still be playing in lower leagues, celebrating this historic moment.
For this island nation perched in the Atlantic, holding the European champions to a draw was their Independence Day.
At the other end of the pitch, 64-year-old Spain head coach Luis de la Fuente was walking toward the microphone at the press conference. No anger, no reflection—just a熟练地 pulled out a fig leaf. What was expected to be a massacre turned into a suffocating mud-wrestling match. Spain didn't lose, but they clearly had no idea how to win either.
Anyone who watched this game probably had the illusion that Spain wasn't playing football but conducting a large-scale passing hypnosis experiment.
Facing Cape Verde's parked bus, Spain's midfielders moved like pendulums, precisely passing the ball back and forth between the three defenders and two defensive midfielders. Even when only one defender stood in front of them, they chose to pass back to a center-back thirty meters away. They treated possession like prayer beads, each pass safe, reasonable, and flawless—but also utterly harmless.
The ball spun in the safe zone thirty meters from the opponent's box, and fans in the stands were already yawning. With 74% possession, every pass only drained the match's suspense. This style might grind down weaker teams in league play through physical superiority, but on the World Cup stage, it was self-hypnosis.
De la Fuente attributed this awkwardness to metaphysics after the game. He complained about the opponent's parked bus, lamented bad luck, and even delivered a vivid line: "When the ball doesn't want to go in, it just doesn't want to go in."
It sounded pitiful. Translated into plain language: We created chances, but our forwards couldn't even get the ball on target. He admitted the team lacked precision in front of goal, but that's just the surface. The ball never has a will of its own; it doesn't go in because the players kicking it lack the courage to strike hard, take risks, or make those potentially error-prone but lethal moves in the jungle of muscles.
Cape Verde's defense was indeed disciplined, turning the area in front of the box into a meat grinder. But what truly killed Spain's attack wasn't the opponent's tackles—it was their own fear of mistakes. When a team values not conceding more than scoring, their shots become a perfunctory routine. Take a shot, miss, then hold their heads in their hands.
This rigidity isn't solely De la Fuente's fault; it's the bitter fruit of Spain's entire youth football assembly line.
Just looking at the press conference, you'd think De la Fuente was just a stubborn old man shifting blame. But reviewing the post-match stats and game footage, the problems on the field are glaringly obvious—yet no one dared to change them during the game. The crisis exposed by this draw is clear: ineffective possession, lack of finishing ability, player homogeneity, and delayed tactical adjustments.
Especially player homogeneity.
In simple terms, Spain's youth assembly line has produced a batch of perfect safe-pass masters. Go to La Masia or any La Liga giant's academy, and you'll see kids taught from a young age to control the ball, observe, and make the most reasonable pass. Coaches hold tactical boards, and the core evaluation is always tactical execution and absolute ball control. If you dare to take on defenders on the wing and lose the ball, you'll be substituted and scolded.
This rigid evaluation has ground down their wildness. Think back twenty years: Spain's wings were manned by players like Joaquín and Reyes—explosive talents who would charge into crowds and send the ball into the box even if they got kicked down. Now, the wingers are all inside-cutting midfielders. The entire team can achieve a pass completion rate over 92%—meaning fewer than 8 misses in 100 passes—but it also means all 100 passes stay in the safe zone.
Football isn't a math problem. When you need someone to take on a defender one-on-one, thread a through ball through three opponents, or poke the ball in with a toe in the box, you look around and find everyone waiting for someone else to do the dirty work.
That's the root of the finishing problem. It's not that they lack technique; it's that their minds lack the string called risk. They're too afraid to lose possession, too afraid to break that false sense of control. When all eleven players on the field share the same midfield mindset, delayed tactical adjustments become inevitable. Because the coach looks at the bench and sees that the substitutes play the same football as those they replace. You can't use homogeneous parts to assemble a variable that can break down a parked bus.
The reason Spain won the European Championship was their sharpness in one-on-one wing play and their audacity to pass into dangerous areas. But in their World Cup opener, that sharpness vanished. The team regressed into a precise but sluggish machine, spinning its wheels in Cape Verde's quagmire. Football has never been a game of who has the higher pass completion rate; it's a game of who dares to get their shirt dirty. When Spain tried to solve a problem requiring brute force with clean passes, they had already lost.
Tactical conservatism, at its core, is psychological cowardice. And the source of that cowardice is a string of seemingly glorious numbers.
At the post-match press conference, when asked why the team struggled so much, De la Fuente deployed his ultimate defensive weapon: "The team's 32-match unbeaten streak says it all."
This sentence perfectly encapsulates the current psychological state of Spanish football. A 32-match unbeaten streak is a glorious statistic worthy of the federation's annual report, a golden shield for the coach to keep his job, and a endorsement for players' market value. But pull out the tapes of those 32 matches and see how many were 1-0 grind-fests against weak teams through possession? How many were peace treaties bought by opponents abandoning attack and parking the bus in the box?
This is no overwhelming winning streak; it's a series of carefully calculated "not losing." In these matches, Spain has long been accustomed to wasting time with over 70% possession, cutting off forward passes after taking a one-goal lead. They've turned "not conceding" into muscle memory but forgotten "how to score."
Because they're unbeaten, they can't lose; because they can't lose, they dare not take risks; without risk, they only pass backward. When being unbeaten transforms from a result into a KPI to defend, the team loses the wildness to fight in desperate situations. Look through history: which great team maintained an unbeaten streak in a greenhouse? True powerhouses have rolled in the mud and turned things around in adversity.
Why did Cape Verde hold on? Because they had nothing to lose. They didn't care about records or market value; they only knew they were facing the European champions. If they tackled, blocked, and dragged the game into a brawl, they could write the hardest chapter in their history. The players' embrace in the locker room was the highest reward for that wildness.
And Spain? They wore the most expensive boots, carried the most glamorous titles, but in their minds, they calculated: If this pass fails, will the media criticize me? If this dribble is intercepted, will it lead to a goal? When a team in the attacking third thinks not about how to get the ball in but how to avoid losing it, their attack is already dead. De la Fuente's defense with the 32-match unbeaten streak precisely reveals his inner fear. He dares not shatter this golden body, even if it has become a ornate coffin.
But the World Cup group stage is never about padding stats or protecting KPIs.
A 0-0 draw has pushed Spain to the edge. To see if a team is truly strong or just pretentious, don't look at how many passes they make in good times; look at whether they dare to pass into the most dangerous areas when stuck in the mud.
If Spain continues this prayer-bead possession style in the remaining group matches, if they still expect the ball to willingly go in, then this tournament favorite will likely lose its shirt in the group stage. The counterattacks from their group opponents are not like Cape Verde's pure defense; once they intercept, their three-pronged speed can instantly tear apart Spain's overly high defensive line.
De la Fuente now faces the cruelest choice: continue clinging to that 32-match unbeaten monument, passing meaningless sideways balls in the safe zone, or smash the abacus, throw in players willing to dirty their shirts and take on opponents on the wings, and fight for a way out in the mud.