Cape Verde s historic leap from archipelagic underdogs to World Cup debutants
In The Spotlight
Cape Verde’s historic leap – from archipelagic underdogs to World Cup debutants
In this series, The Straits Times highlights the players or teams to watch in the world of sport. Today, we focus on the journey of tiny Cape Verde, who made history with a historic World Cup berth.
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alt="Supporters celebrate Cape Verde’s victory against Eswatini in their World Cup qualifier."/>Supporters celebrate Cape Verde’s victory against Eswatini in their World Cup qualifier.
AFP
Andy Ng
World Cup 2026In a nation of only 525,000 people scattered across 10 volcanic islands off Africa’s west coast, football has long been more than just a game in Cape Verde – it is a symbol of unity and aspiration.
The national team – nicknamed the “Blue Sharks” – have quietly punched above their weight in the sport.
But on Oct 13, they delivered a seismic shock and made waves, defeating Eswatini 3-0 to clinch their group’s top spot and qualified for the 2026 World Cup.
With a population smaller than many European cities, the archipelago nation secured their first-ever berth at the global showpiece, edging out five-time African champions Cameroon by four points.
This triumph, as they look ahead to the expanded 48-team tournament co-hosted by the United States, Canada, and Mexico, marks not just a sporting milestone but also a cultural eruption for a country marking 50 years of independence from Portugal in 1975.
The victory unfolded at Estadio Nacional in Praia, the capital, before a sellout crowd of 15,000.
A tense, goalless first half gave way to second-half fireworks as Dailon Rocha Livramento, Willy Semedo and veteran defender Stopira sealed the famous victory.
Ranked 71st globally, Cape Verde finished with 23 points from 10 matches – seven wins,
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