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Cabo Verde, 0-0

· 2 min read

Cabo Verde held Spain to a 0-0 draw at their first ever World Cup, and I’ve been thinking about it for two days now.

Half a million people live there, spread across ten volcanic islands in the Atlantic — a smaller crowd than some of the stadiums at this tournament hold on a single night. They had never qualified before. And the reward for finally getting here was Spain, the reigning European champions, in the group stage. By every reasonable expectation it should have been a long evening. It wasn’t. They defended for ninety minutes like the result was personal, the keeper had the kind of game you remember for the rest of your life, and at the end of it the scoreboard still said nothing-nothing.

I don’t think it’s the upset that got to me, exactly. Spain will be fine; they’ll probably win the group. It’s more that I keep picturing the islands while it was happening — the bars and the living rooms, kids who have only ever seen their country in the qualifiers if at all, watching the team hold one of the best sides on the planet to zero. You grow up being quietly told where your ceiling is. A night like that quietly moves it.

Maybe I’m reading too much into one draw. It isn’t a trophy, and a group stage is a long way from anything. But there’s something about a country showing up for the first time and refusing to be a formality that I find genuinely moving, and I’d rather just admit that than talk myself out of it.

0-0, and I can’t stop smiling about it.