FIFA World Cup Round of 32: Cape Verde make history as all 32 teams confirmed
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Cape Verde etched their name into football history on 27 June, becoming the smallest nation ever to qualify for the FIFA World Cup Round of 32 after holding Saudi Arabia to a goalless draw in Group H. The result secured the Blue Sharks second place in the group and a landmark knockout-stage meeting with defending champions Argentina at Miami Stadium on 3 July.
How Cape Verde Made History
The Blue Sharks finished the group stage unbeaten, drawing all three matches to accumulate three points — one ahead of two-time world champions Uruguay and 2034 hosts Saudi Arabia. Cape Verde are also only the third African side to exit their maiden World Cup group stage without a defeat, following Morocco in 1986 and Cameroon and Nigeria in 1998 and 2014 respectively. This is the biggest moment in the island nation's football history.
Key Moments from the Saudi Arabia Draw
Cape Verde were the more threatening side throughout the contest. Willy Semedo tested the Saudi goalkeeper with a sharp near-post effort before firing another attempt wide, while Kevin Pina narrowly missed the top corner with a powerful long-range strike early in the second half. Saudi Arabia's clearest opportunity fell to goalkeeper Mohammed Al Owais, who pushed aside a shot from Laros Duarte after the Cape Verdean forward burst through the middle with roughly 15 minutes remaining.
Other Group Stage Results
Belgium won Group G after beating Egypt, while Iran and Senegal remained in contention to advance via second place or one of the best third-place spots. South Africa claimed second place in Group A and will face Canada in Los Angeles, while South Korea secured qualification as one of the best third-placed teams.
All 32 Qualified Teams
With the group stage nearly complete, the full list of Round of 32 qualifiers is: Mexico, South Africa, Switzerland, Canada, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brazil, Morocco, United States, Australia, Paraguay, Germany, Cote d'Ivoire, Ecuador, Netherlands, Japan, Sweden, Belgium, Egypt, Spain, Cape Verde, France, Norway, Senegal, Argentina, Colombia, Portugal, England and Ghana.
What Happens Next
The Round of 32 kicks off on 28 June, with Cape Verde's clash against world champions Argentina headlining the opening round of knockout fixtures. For the Blue Sharks, the match represents a collision between a footballing minnow and the sport's reigning superpower — and a moment that an entire nation will be watching.