
Spain’s 2026 World Cup campaign got off to a frustrating start at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on June 15, as a disciplined Cape Verde side held them to a scoreless draw despite being outshot 27 to 6. Goalkeeper Vozinha made seven saves to deny Luis de la Fuente’s side in what was one of the tournament’s more eye-catching results on opening day. With an xG of 2.29 against 0.30, Spain did everything but score, leaving Atlanta with just one point and real questions about their finishing.
Key Moments
- 16′, Sidny Lopes Cabral picked up a yellow card for a rough challenge, an early signal that Cape Verde were prepared to defend physically against Spain’s attacking pressure.
- 61′, Cape Verde made a triple substitution, bringing on Jovane Cabral, Dailon Rocha Livramento, and Laros Duarte, reshuffling their defensive shape with just under 30 minutes left to protect the goalless draw.
- 71′, Luis de la Fuente responded by sending on replacements for Fabián Ruiz and Gavi, looking for fresh legs and new combinations to finally unlock the stubborn Cape Verde backline.
- 87′, Rodri was taken off late, a precautionary move in a match already drifting toward a draw, with Spain unable to find the breakthrough despite a final flurry.
- 90′, Pedri was booked for holding in stoppage time as Spain’s desperation grew, though it came too late to change the outcome.
Tactical Breakdown
Spain were relentless in their attempts to break Cape Verde down, finishing with 74% possession, 801 passes at 92% accuracy, and 11 corner kicks. The 27 total shots, 16 of them from inside the box, tell the story of a team that created positions repeatedly but could not convert. Their xG of 2.29 suggests this was not a lack of chances but a failure to take them, with Vozinha repeatedly coming up with the decisive intervention.
Luis de la Fuente tried to inject urgency from the bench, using all four of his substitutions and making the double change at the 71st minute a genuine tactical pivot. Cape Verde’s own triple substitution at the 61st minute effectively reset their defensive block and gave their legs a second wind for the final half hour. It disrupted the rhythm Spain had been building and, in hindsight, proved decisive in preserving the clean sheet.
For Cape Verde, coach Pedro Leitao Brito set his side up in a 4-1-4-1 that kept numbers behind the ball and limited Spain to shots from distance or congested central areas. With only one foul committed all game, they avoided gifting Spain set pieces in dangerous positions, and their discipline was nearly perfect. What it cost them was any sustained threat going forward, generating an xG of just 0.30, but at this level a point against Spain is a genuine result.
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Match Context
Verdict
Spain now sit on one point in their group alongside other first-round results, while Cape Verde’s draw represents a significant statement for African football at this World Cup. For Luis de la Fuente’s side, the result is a reality check, and the finishing woes that surfaced on Sunday will need addressing before their next group game. Cape Verde, meanwhile, will face much stiffer tests ahead, but their goalkeeper and collective defensive effort have already given the tournament its first genuine upset of the group stage.