Cape Verde plot World Cup upset against Argentina to continue fairytale run
Cape Verde's goalkeeper Vozinha (R) celebrates after the 2026 World Cup Group H football match between Cape Verde and Saudi Arabia at the Houston Stadium in Houston on June 26, 2026. The game finished 0-0.
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By any measure, Cape Verde should have next to
no chance of knocking Argentina and Lionel Messi out of the World Cup on
Friday, but the Africans have huge confidence in
their ability to defy the odds and keep their fairytale debut campaign alive.
Draws with former World Cup winners Spain and
Uruguay helped them into the knockout stage and far from cursing their luck at
having to play the reigning champions in
the round of 32, assistant coach Humberto Bettencourt said this week that it
would be "a pleasure" to face
the Albiceleste.
"Statistics are theories. Football — as many
results throughout history have shown — proves that what really
counts is what happens inside the four lines," he told reporters at the
team's camp in Tampa on Sunday.
"They gave
us one percent before, and now four percent is irrelevant to us. We focus much
more on our ambitions, our expectations, and
above all on the value that defines this working group."
Bettencourt said Cape Verde would not be changing
their style measurably to contain the world champions and had no plans to
man-mark Messi in an attempt to nullify the threat of the little Argentine
general.
"We consider
Messi to be a player who makes a difference," Bettencourt added. "But
we always look at the collective — the combinations that
can be created, the spaces they may try to open up for Messi."
The least populous nation ever to make the knockout
rounds of
a World Cup, Cape Verde's campaign has not only raised the profile of the squad
but also put the entire island-nation on the map.
People have migrated from Cape Verde throughout its
history -- the World Cup squad includes players born in the Netherlands,
Portugal, France, the United States and Ireland -- including a sizeable number
to Argentina.
Bettencourt, the only member of the Cape
Verde delegation to speak to the media this week, confirmed
that Telmo Arcanjo was 50-50 for the Argentina game because of a leg injury.
The skilful midfielder did not train with the team on Wednesday.
Combative left back Sidny Lopes Cabral will
be available again, however, after serving a one-match ban against Saudi Arabia
for picking
up yellow cards against Spain and Uruguay.
Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni looks set to bring
Messi back into his line-up after starting him on the bench in their last group
match against Jordan.
Messi came on as a substitute to score his sixth
goal of the tournament in the 3-1
win that kept the Albiceleste perfect with three wins out of three
through the opening round.
Otherwise, Scaloni will be considering which of the
many top-class players in his squad are best suited to breaking down the Cape
Verde defence and avoiding what would rank among the greatest World Cup upsets.

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