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Cape Verde Secure World Cup Last 32 Berth After 0-0 Draw With Saudi Arabia

Cape Verde booked a historic World Cup last‑32 place after a 0-0 draw with Saudi Arabia at Houston Stadium, finishing second in Group H with three points and setting up a knockout tie against reigning champions Argentina on 3 July at Miami Stadium after Uruguay lost to European title holders Spain.

The African debutants completed their group with three draws against Spain, Uruguay and Saudi Arabia, becoming the first World Cup newcomers to progress beyond the group stage since Slovakia in 2010, and the first African debutant to do so since Ghana’s breakthrough run in 2006, underlining a disciplined defensive campaign.

Cape Verde reach World Cup last 32

Cape Verde’s run also places the team alongside Senegal’s 2002 side as the only World Cup debutants this century to stay unbeaten in all three group fixtures, with a record of one win-equivalent through three draws (W1 D2 L0) on performance, while Saudi Arabia exit after failing to reach the knockouts in six consecutive tournament appearances.

Their progress relied on compact defending across the group, capped by another assured display against Saudi Arabia, who created limited danger. Cape Verde restricted Georgios Donis’ team to just seven shots and an expected goals value of 0.4, while producing 15 attempts themselves and generating 1.52 expected goals without finding a decisive finish.

The game in Houston opened quietly before a sudden surge of activity. Saudi Arabia captain Salem Al Dawsari forced the first meaningful chance, but Wagner Pina blocked the close‑range strike. The attempt, at 17 minutes and 12 seconds, was the latest first shot recorded in any match at this World Cup edition.

Cape Verde reacted soon after that early warning. Willy Semedo drove into the penalty area and made Mohammed Al Owais save at the near post, signalling greater attacking intent from the tournament newcomers, yet clear openings remained scarce as Cape Verde pushed forward without consistent precision in the final third despite growing confidence.

Semedo stayed dangerous and later sent a powerful effort just wide of the left upright. Saudi Arabia almost punished that miss in first‑half stoppage time when Mohamed Kanno met a cross with a looping header, but goalkeeper Vozinha tracked the flight well and caught the ball safely under minimal pressure.

Cape Verde World Cup second-half chances and late drama

Cape Verde started the second period with higher tempo. Jamiro Monteiro shot straight at Al Owais from inside the area, then Kevin Pina unleashed a 30‑yard strike that flew narrowly past the post, showing Cape Verde’s growing belief as they sensed that one goal could secure qualification without depending on Spain.

Saudi Arabia introduced Mohammed Abu Al Shamat, who almost changed the game immediately. Abu Al Shamat drilled an effort from a tight angle, but Vozinha reacted sharply and clawed the ball away. At the opposite end, substitute Laros Duarte broke through one-on-one, only for Al Owais to deny Cape Verde with a crucial save.

Saudi Arabia pushed numbers forward late on, chasing a winner that would have altered the group standings. That strategy left large gaps for Cape Verde counter-attacks, yet Donis’ side still nearly stole victory when Abdullah Al Hamddan’s weak shot in stoppage time was gathered by Vozinha, provoking jubilant celebrations from Cape Verde supporters.

Cape Verde World Cup records, statistics and key performers

Vozinha, who had already impressed in the draw with Spain, added another milestone. The goalkeeper became only the third player aged over 40 to record more than one World Cup clean sheet, matching Peter Shilton’s three and Dino Zoff’s two shutouts, with his latest display central to Cape Verde’s qualification.

Duarte’s influence from the bench was also notable. Introduced in the 71st minute, Duarte created three chances for Cape Verde in limited time. Only Turkiye’s Can Uzun, with four against Paraguay, and Uruguay’s Nicolas de la Cruz, with four against Saudi Arabia, have produced more opportunities as substitutes at this World Cup.

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The match numbers underlined Cape Verde’s stronger performance across 90 minutes, as shown below.

{TABLE_1}
Team Shots xG
Cape Verde 15 1.52
Saudi Arabia 7 0.4

Cape Verde leave Houston with another clean sheet, more defensive records and a place in the last 32, where Argentina await in Miami, while Saudi Arabia depart after another group-stage elimination, having been held at arm’s length by an organised side whose World Cup debut now extends into the knockout phase.

Story first published: Saturday, June 27, 2026, 8:47 [IST]
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