"De Paul and Argentina Show Genuine Respect for Cape Verde's Historic World Cup Run"
In a refreshing display of sportsmanship ahead of one of the most lopsided matchups on paper in World Cup knockout history, Argentina midfielder Rodrigo De Paul made it clear that the reigning champions are taking nothing for granted against Cape Verde. Speaking to Telemundo's "Enlace Mundial" program, De Paul stressed that Argentina will approach their Round of 32 clash "with great responsibility," warning that underestimating the Blue Sharks would be a serious mistake. The quote carries weight — this isn't routine pre-match diplomacy. It comes from a player who has won a World Cup, a Copa América, and who knows exactly what an underdog with nothing to lose can do on the biggest stage.
The matchup itself tells a story that only football can write. Argentina, three-time World Cup champions, holders of the trophy, boasting a squad stuffed with talent from Europe's elite clubs. On the other side, Cape Verde — a nation of roughly 590,000 people, making their World Cup debut, who have already exceeded every expectation simply by being here. The archipelago nation, scattered across ten islands in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of West Africa, has captured the imagination of the football world not despite its size but because of it.
Cape Verde's journey to this moment deserves genuine celebration. They qualified for their first World Cup in October 2025 with a decisive 3-0 victory over Eswatini, becoming the smallest nation by land area and one of the smallest by population to ever reach the tournament. But qualifying was only the beginning. In their opening group match, they held Spain — the reigning European champions — to a stunning 0-0 draw, earning their first World Cup point in the most dramatic fashion imaginable. That result wasn't a fluke; it was the product of disciplined defending, smart tactical organization, and a collective belief that has defined Cape Verdean football for years.
The fact that Cape Verde has now gone further — reaching the knockout stages as the smallest nation ever to do so — is the kind of story that makes the World Cup the world's most-watched sporting event. It's a reminder that the tournament's magic doesn't just live in the blockbuster clashes between traditional powers. Sometimes, it lives in a team of players from a country most people couldn't find on a map, who have outworked, out-organized, and out-believed nations with ten times their resources.
De Paul's comments reflect something important about the current Argentine squad's mentality. Under Lionel Scaloni, Argentina has built a culture of humility and collective effort that stands in stark contrast to some of the star-studded but ultimately dysfunctional Argentine teams of the past. This is a group that learned the hard way — through the pain of losing the 2014 final, through the growth that led to the 2021 Copa América and 2022 World Cup triumphs — that no victory is guaranteed. When De Paul says Argentina will take Cape Verde seriously, he's expressing a philosophy that has been central to Argentina's recent success.
What makes this encounter particularly fascinating is how it sits within the broader history of World Cup underdog stories. The tournament has long been the stage where football's established order gets challenged. Cameroon's Roger Milla dancing at the corner flag in 1990. Senegal beating defending champions France in the opening match of 2002. Costa Rica topping a group containing England, Italy, and Uruguay in 2014. Morocco reaching the semifinals in 2022. Each of these moments didn't just produce a headline — they permanently expanded the imagination of what's possible for smaller football nations. Cape Verde's run in 2026 is the latest chapter in this tradition, and its significance may prove even more profound given the sheer scale of the resource disparity involved.
There is a broader significance here for the development of African football and island-nation football specifically. Cape Verde's success didn't come from nowhere. It's the product of years of smart federation management, strategic recruitment of diaspora talent — many Cape Verdean internationals were born or raised in Portugal, France, and the Netherlands — and a cohesive tactical identity built around defensive solidity and quick transitions. For other small nations watching from home, Cape Verde is demonstrating that there's a viable template: you don't need a population of 50 million or a domestic league that competes with Europe's top five. You need a plan, patience, and a generation of players willing to buy into something bigger than themselves.
The match itself will be played at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, a venue that should feel something like neutral ground. Argentina will have overwhelming support from the large Argentine diaspora in South Florida, but neutral fans — and there will be many — will be firmly behind Cape Verde. That's the nature of the World Cup. Everyone loves an underdog, and Cape Verde, with a population smaller than the capacity of most World Cup stadiums, is the ultimate underdog.
Cape Verde's president, José Maria Neves, has publicly predicted a 1-0 victory for his nation, telling the BBC that "a small nation like Cape Verde should make an effort to always do that — to permanently surprise people." It's the kind of quote that could be dismissed as bluster from a politician, but coming amid a run where Cape Verde has already held Spain scoreless and advanced from their group, it carries a different weight. The president is reflecting a genuine national belief that something special is happening.
For Argentina, this match represents the first step on a path they hope ends with a successful title defense — something no nation has accomplished since Brazil in 1962. The pressure on Messi and his teammates is immense, not just because of the expectations of a football-mad nation, but because this tournament almost certainly represents the final World Cup for the greatest player of his generation. Every match carries the weight of potential finality.
De Paul, for his part, embodies the kind of player every champion needs: the midfield engine who does the unglamorous work, the bridge between defense and attack, the competitor who sets the emotional tone. His words about Cape Verde aren't just diplomatic courtesy. They're a signal to his teammates that the standards don't drop just because the opponent's FIFA ranking is lower. That's how dynasties are built — not by winning the matches you're expected to win while coasting, but by winning them with the same intensity you'd bring against any opponent.
Whether Cape Verde can actually produce the upset of the century remains to be seen. Argentina is a formidable machine, and the gap in individual quality is undeniable. But Cape Verde has already proven that their organization and spirit can neutralize superior talent — the Spain result wasn't an accident. If they can frustrate Argentina early, if they can keep the score level into the second half, the pressure shifts. It shifts onto Argentina's shoulders, onto the weight of a nation's expectations, onto the ticking clock of Messi's final World Cup. And in that pressure cooker, anything is possible.
Regardless of the result, this match is already a triumph for the World Cup as an institution. It pairs the game's establishment against its most inspiring newcomer. It gives a tiny island nation a global platform. And it reminds us all why we watch: not just to see the best teams win, but to see what happens when a group of players, against all odds, dares to believe they belong on the same field as giants.
Source: Telemundo — De Paul: "Tomaremos el partido con mucha responsabilidad"
Additional context: BBC Sport — How Cape Verde stunned World Cup to set up Argentina tie
Comments
De Paul saying they're taking Cape Verde seriously is the right call. But it's deeper than that. Argentina's identity under Scaloni is built on the idea that nobody gets a free pass. Every champion knows the moment you look past an opponent is the moment you get caught. It's like the Giants beating the undefeated Patriots — the favorite that forgets to earn the win.
Cape Verde holding Spain scoreless wasn't a fluke. That tells me they've got the defensive discipline to frustrate anyone. If this is 0-0 at halftime, the pressure shifts completely. The clock is ticking on Messi's last World Cup, and a team that believes they belong can make that clock feel a lot shorter. This has classic upset special written all over it.
Leave a Comment