Some results don’t just make headlines — they rewrite what people believe is possible. On Monday night in Atlanta, World Cup debutants Cape Verde, a nation of roughly half a million people, walked onto the same pitch as reigning European champions Spain and walked off with something no one outside their own dressing room thought they deserved: a point.
The final score read 0-0. The story behind it read like a movie script.
Spain Knocked, Knocked, and Knocked Again

This wasn’t a backs-to-the-wall smash-and-grab. Cape Verde didn’t sit deep and hope for one lucky breakaway. Spain absolutely laid siege to their goal — 27 shots, 74% possession, and an expected goals tally north of 2.5, the kind of numbers that usually end in a comfortable three-goal cushion. On paper, La Roja should have strolled this one.
But football doesn’t always read the script.

Ferran Torres rattled the crossbar after a slick passing move involving Rodri and Marc Cucurella, and on the follow-up, Mikel Oyarzabal’s header was somehow tipped over by a man who, by Monday morning, almost nobody outside Cape Verde had heard of.
Enter Vozinha, Stage Left, Aged 40

If this game had a main character, it was 40-year-old goalkeeper Vozinha. He’s spent nineteen years bouncing between clubs in Portugal, Cape Verde, Moldova, Angola, Cyprus, and Slovakia, with only a single trophy to his name — a Cypriot Cup, won back in 2018-19. Not exactly the résumé of a man about to become a global sensation.

And yet, on the biggest stage of his life, he turned in a performance for the ages. He finished the match with seven saves, repelling everything Spain’s superstars threw at him: Torres, twice. Oyarzabal. Aymeric Laporte. Fabian Ruiz even had a free header in the box in the 56th minute — straight at Vozinha, who calmly gathered it like it was a Sunday training session.

He became the oldest goalkeeper to keep a clean sheet on a nation’s World Cup debut, breaking a record that had stood for decades. Spain even threw teenage wonderkid Lamine Yamal on with twenty minutes left, hoping a jolt of youthful magic might finally crack the door open. It didn’t.
The Numbers That Tell the Whole Story
Here’s the stat that sums up Cape Verde’s night better than anything else: despite conceding 74% possession, they committed only one foul in the entire match — the fewest by any team in a World Cup game since 1966. That’s not luck. That’s discipline, organization, and a defense — led by Diney Borges and Dublin-born center-back Pico Lopes — that simply refused to be rattled.

Spain even nearly snatched a winner in stoppage time when Oyarzabal’s shot in the 88th minute was deflected wide by a sliding Pico Lopes, and Cape Verde had a corner of their own in the dying seconds that nearly produced a fairytale ending of their own.
The Internet Couldn’t Look Away

While the football itself was gripping, what happened off the pitch was just as wild. Vozinha began the day with around 56,000 Instagram followers. By the time he left the stadium, that number had rocketed past 5 million and counting. Clips of him being mobbed by teammates, crying with the Cape Verdean flag draped around him, and reacting in disbelief to his exploding follower count spread across X and Instagram within hours, with fans calling him the find of the tournament and a new favorite underdog to root for.
What It Means

Cape Verde’s coach Pedro Leitão Brito didn’t hide his emotion afterward: “This means everything for our country… this is proof of what our country is about — resilience and to try to overcome hardships.” For Spain, there’s no need to panic just yet — after all, the only time they actually won the World Cup, back in 2010, they also lost their opening game. But for Cape Verde, this single point already feels like gold. They’ll carry the momentum into matches against Uruguay and Saudi Arabia, knowing that on their very first night on the world’s biggest stage, they didn’t just survive — they made history.
Man of the Match: Vozinha













