Cape Verde is the story of the tournament. Ten volcanic islands 350 miles off the coast of Senegal, a total population of 525,000 (that's one-third of Dallas), a football federation with an operating budget smaller than some American youth clubs — and they beat Cameroon and Eswatini and Angola to top their CAF qualifying group and book a flight to their first-ever World Cup.
The manager is Bubista — Pedro Leitão Brito, a former Cape Verdean international who played his career out between Portugal's second division and the Cypriot league, took the national team job in 2020, and has spent six years convincing Portuguese-born kids with Cape Verdean grandparents to choose the Blue Sharks. Half the squad came through that pathway. The captain Ryan Mendes, the keeper Vozinha, the striker Willy Semedo, a cluster of defenders from Benfica and Porto academies — a national team built on diaspora, which is the only way a country this small was ever going to get here.
The draw was unkind. Group H is Spain, Uruguay, Saudi Arabia, and Cape Verde — probably the hardest group a debutant could have pulled. They'll open against Spain in Guadalajara and will be heavy underdogs in all three matches. None of that matters. The entire nation is already on the plane. The goal was to qualify. They qualified. Everything after this is bonus, and they know it.