Favorites Spain face tiny Cape Verde to kick off World Cup mission
Spain national team players attend a training session in Chattanooga, Tennessee, U.S., June 11, 2026. (Reuters Photo)


Spain arrived in Atlanta expecting to make a deep World Cup run, but faces a Monday opener against Cape Verde, whose players are embracing the excitement of representing their nation at the tournament for the first time.

The ⁠European champions open their Group H campaign against Cape Verde, with Uruguay and Saudi Arabia also in the section, in a fixture ​that looks on paper like a meeting of ​different football ⁠planets.

Luis de la Fuente's side have become close to immovable over the last four years, going 30 matches unbeaten since a 1-0 friendly loss to Colombia at Wembley in March 2024. Since then, Spain have recorded 23 wins and seven draws playing some of the most entertaining, attacking football seen in recent times.

The only wrinkle in that spotless-looking run was a 5-4 penalty defeat to Portugal in the 2025 Nations League final after a 2-2 draw, following extra time, in a match where Spain twice led ⁠but ⁠failed to retain the title they had won in 2023.

Cape Verde, however, are not merely in North America to provide the romance. The Blue Sharks were one of the surprise qualifiers for the 2026 World Cup and, with fewer than 600,000 inhabitants, are the third-smallest country by population to reach the tournament after Iceland in 2018 and Curacao, also in 2026.

Their rise has been stitched together from an archipelago and a diaspora. ⁠That blend proved highly effective in qualifying, where Cape Verde won seven of their 10 games, lost only once and claimed a stunning home victory over Cameroon.

Their World Cup ​place may feel like a fairy tale, but Cape Verde have been building ​credibility for years. In 2013, they qualified for their first Africa Cup of Nations and reached the quarterfinals at the first attempt.

Spain, meanwhile, ⁠may ‌take a ‌cautious approach with Lamine Yamal and Nico Williams, who ⁠are in the final stages of recovery ‌from hamstring injuries sustained in April. Both returned to training with their teammates Thursday, but ​De la Fuente may decide ⁠patience is wiser than risk.

For Spain, the target is ⁠a second World Cup title after their 2010 triumph in South Africa. ⁠For Cape Verde, Monday ​offers something rarer still: the first page of a story their supporters have waited generations to read.