Connect with us

World Cup

Cape Verde success would have been scarcely believable 20 years ago

blank

Published

on

blank

The Cape Verde Islands are one win away from a World Cup place that confirms the promise they have shown in recent years but would have been scarcely believable 20 years ago.

The wind-swept island archipelago, off the west coast of Africa, with a population of around 600,000, will become the second smallest country after Iceland to qualify if they win one of their last two qualifiers over the next week.

They are away to Libya on Wednesday before a home clash with Eswatini on Monday in which to ensure top spot in Group D and beat much-fancied Cameroon to the automatic qualifying spot for next year’s tournament in North America.

Cape Verde reached the last stages of qualification for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil but were deducted points for erroneously fielding a suspended player, thereby missing out on the playoffs where they would also have been two games away from reaching the finals.

In their debut Africa Cup of Nations finals appearance in 2013, Cape Verde reached the quarter-finals, prompting their coach to burst into song at the post-match press conference, and they did so again at the last edition in the Ivory Coast, unlucky to be eliminated on penalties.

Advertisement

Two decades ago, however, they had barely played any international football, averaging two games a year from 1986, when they joined FIFA, to 1990 when they competed in the World Cup qualifiers for the first time ranked 182nd in the world.

The progress since has been rapid, driven by actively finding players from the Diaspora around the world.

TALENT IDENTIFICATION PAYING OFF

“The football association devised new strategies around identifying and recruiting talent throughout the large Cape Verdean communities,” said U.S.-based agent Tony Araujo, who was born on the islands and worked closely with the team over decades.

“The talent identification and global recruitment process started to pay off huge dividends around 2013, when they qualified for their first Cup of Nations final.”

Scarce natural resources and an arid landscape have long caused migration from the islands, stretching back to the Portuguese colonial period.

Advertisement

Migrants left in droves for Portugal as well as other destinations, like the U.S. eastern seaboard and Dutch port of Rotterdam.

The squad for this week’s fixtures has six Dutch-born players plus others born in Portugal, France, and Ireland. Shamrock Rovers’ Roberto “Pico” Lopes, who will play in central defence, was among many scouted and approached, some more creatively than others.

“I set up a LinkedIn profile when I was in college but never really looked at it,” Lopes told Reuters.

“I got a message from the then coach Rui Aguas, but he wrote to me in Portuguese. I thought it was spam and took no notice.

“Then about nine months later, he messaged me back, saying, ‘Hi Roberto, have you had a chance to consider what I said to you?’ I copied the message into Google Translate. And it basically said that, ‘we’re looking at getting new players into the Cape Verde squad and would you be interested in declaring for Cape Verde? I was absolutely buzzing with that! I was like, ‘yep, 100% I’d love to be a part of the squad’,” he recalled.

Advertisement

In the past, it was hard for the team to attract top European-based Cape Verdean talent, Araujo said.

SUCCESS HAS ATTRACTED NEW PLAYERS

“But with new waves of recent success, a lot more European-based talents are inclined to choose Cape Verde to showcase their talents at the international level.”

Victory in Tripoli on Wednesday will be tough, but if unsuccessful they will be heavily fancied to secure qualification on Monday with home success against the Swazis.

Beating Cameroon last month set off celebrations across the islands, and those will surely be repeated with vigour should they secure a World Cup spot.

-Reuters

Advertisement

Join the Sports Village Square channel on WhatsApp: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vaz7mEIGk1FxU8YIXb0H

Kunle Solaja is the author of landmark books on sports and journalism as well as being a multiple award-winning journalist and editor of long standing. He is easily Nigeria’s foremost soccer diarist and Africa's most capped FIFA World Cup journalist, having attended all FIFA World Cup finals from Italia ’90 to Qatar 2022. He was honoured at the Qatar 2022 World Cup by FIFA and AIPS.

Continue Reading
Advertisement

World Cup

Madonna, BTS and Shakira to headline first World Cup final halftime show

blank

Published

on

blank
Madonna performs during a concert at the Copacabana beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil May 4, 2024. REUTERS/Pilar Olivares/File Photo

Madonna and Shakira will line up with K-pop supergroup BTS to headline the ​first-ever World Cup final halftime show at ‌MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, FIFA said on Thursday.

Coldplay singer Chris Martin will curate the extravaganza scheduled for ​July 19, the tournament’s organiser added.

“The ​FIFA World Cup 2026 Final halftime show ⁠will be a truly special moment, bringing ​together music, football and a shared commitment to ​improving the lives of children around the world,” FIFA president Gianni Infantino said on social media.

“Together, we will ​support the FIFA Global Citizen Education Fund ​and help create greater access to quality education and ‌football ⁠for children worldwide.”

The 48-team World Cup, co-hosted by the United States, Canada, and Mexico, will run from June 11 to July 19. The ​tournament will ​feature 104 ⁠matches, up from the previous 64, including an additional knockout round.

Advertisement

Last ​year’s Club World Cup in North ​America, ⁠which served as a test run for the World Cup, also featured a halftime show ⁠including ​performances from American rapper Doja ​Cat, Colombian singer J Balvin and Nigerian singer Tems.

-Reuters

Visit the Sports Village Square Channel:

https://www.whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vaz7mEIGk1FxU8YIXb0H

Advertisement

Continue Reading

World Cup

Study warns of dangerous heat at 2026 World Cup as climate risks grow

blank

Published

on

blank
May 13, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; A general view of the stadium during a media day ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup at Lincoln Financial Field.  Credit: Kyle Ross-Imagn Images 

Football’s global players’ union renewed concerns on Thursday about ​heat at the 2026 World Cup after scientists warned that the likelihood of dangerous temperatures for players and fans has sharply increased.

An ‌analysis by climate research group World Weather Attribution found that roughly a quarter of the 104 matches at the expanded tournament across the United States, Mexico and Canada are likely to be played in conditions exceeding safety limits recommended by FIFPRO, almost twice the risk seen at the 1994 World Cup in the U.S.

Around five matches could take place in ​conditions considered unsafe, where postponement would be advised, the researchers said.

Scientists assessed the risk using kickoff times and the Wet Bulb Globe Temperature (WBGT) ​index, which measures how effectively the body can cool itself.

“The calculations to estimate the likelihood of 2026 FIFA World ⁠Cup games being played in high WBGT conditions are in line with FIFPRO’s calculations published in 2023,” said FIFPRO’s medical director, Vincent Gouttebarge.

Advertisement

“These estimations justify ​the need for – and implementation of – a series of mitigation strategies with a view to better protecting players’ health and performance when they are exposed to ​hot conditions.”

FIFPRO recommends cooling measures when WBGT rises above 26 degrees Celsius and says matches should be postponed if it exceeds 28C, which is equivalent to roughly 38C in dry heat or 30C in high humidity.

FIFA told Reuters that it has carried out heat-risk planning, with measures including three-minute hydration breaks in each half of games, cooling infrastructure for ​fans and players, adapted work-rest cycles, and enhanced medical readiness that scale according to real-time conditions.

“FIFA is committed to protecting the health and safety of ​players, referees, fans, volunteers and staff,” the global governing body said in a statement.

‘MORE CONSERVATIVE FOOTBALL’

Chris Mullington, consultant anaesthetist at Imperial College London NHS Trust and clinical senior lecturer ‌at Imperial ⁠College London, said extreme heat is more likely to influence how games are played than trigger widespread medical emergencies among players.

Advertisement

“It will be more of a performance issue than a health issue,” he said. “These players are elite athletes and acclimatised. You’ll see players self-pacing. That behavioural thermoregulation is very difficult to override.

“So you may end up with more conservative football.”

Cooling systems are expected to reduce some of the risk at three of the 16 host venues, according to ​the analysis.

However, more than a third of ​games with at least a ⁠10% chance of exceeding 26 C WBGT are scheduled at stadiums without air conditioning, including Miami, Kansas City, New York and Philadelphia.

That includes the final at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, which now faces a one-in-eight chance ​of exceeding the 26 C threshold and a roughly 3% risk of reaching the more dangerous level — about ​double the risk it ⁠would have carried in 1994, the analysis said.

Advertisement

Friederike Otto, professor of climate science at Imperial College London, said the findings highlighted the need for FIFA to reconsider when future World Cups are scheduled, particularly in regions vulnerable to extreme summer heat.

“From a health point of view, it would be advisable to have these (World Cups) ⁠either earlier or ​later in the year, so you can have a football party rather than something that ​is a massive health risk for the whole city,” said Otto.

FIFPRO also warned that while air-conditioned stadiums in cities such as Dallas and Houston may help protect players, fans attending matches and ​outdoor fan festivals could remain exposed to prolonged periods of dangerous heat.

-Reuters

Advertisement

Visit the Sports Village Square Channel:

https://www.whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vaz7mEIGk1FxU8YIXb0H

Continue Reading

World Cup

Iran hold World Cup departure rally despite continuing concerns

blank

Published

on

blank
Members of Iran's national soccer team attend a farewell ceremony ahead of their departure to the 2026 World Cup in Tehran, Iran, May 13, 2026. Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via REUTERS

Iran hosted a World Cup departure rally attended by thousands of fans in Tehran’s Enqelab Square on Wednesday night, even though concerns remain about the team getting into the United States and ​competing at the tournament.

The players, who will continue their preparations at a training camp in ‌Turkey next week, were cheered by the crowd as they made patriotic statements from a stage, and the kit they will wear at the June 11 to July 19 tournament was unveiled.

“This is the best send-off in the last four ​World Cup campaigns,” Iranian FA (FFIRI) President Mehdi Taj told state TV.

“The players are with the people, ​and the crowd stands with the country’s dignity, honour, and strength. Whatever the ⁠result, may Iran’s flag be raised there and defended.”

blank

Iran’s national soccer team head coach Amir Ghalenoei and Iran Football Federation President Mehdi Taj attend the team’s farewell ceremony ahead of their departure to the 2026 World Cup in Tehran, Iran, May 13, 2026. Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via REUTERS

Iran’s participation in the World Cup has been in ​question since the U.S. and Israel started the regional war by launching air strikes on the Islamic Republic in ​late February.

Advertisement

Taj was refused entry to co-host nation Canada for the FIFA Congress two weeks ago because of his connection to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), triggering fears there may be issues for some of the Iranian delegation getting into ​the U.S.

As in Canada, the IRGC is classified as a “terrorist entity” in the U.S., and Secretary of ​State Marco Rubio has said no one with ties to the organisation would be admitted to the country.

Iran has placed ‌responsibility ⁠for getting the players and team officials into the U.S., where Team Melli are scheduled to play all three World Cup group matches, firmly in the hands of tournament organisers FIFA.

“Nothing has arrived yet regarding the visas. We hope it will definitely be handled within this timeframe,” Hedayat Mombeini, the FFIRI secretary-general, told ​state TV at the rally ​on Wednesday.

“FIFA has made ⁠promises, and hopefully those promises will lead to results, and the players will receive their visas on time.”

Advertisement

Reports that some Iraqi players had been refused U.S. ​visas, which were quickly refuted by the White House and Iraq Football Association on ​Wednesday, further ⁠fuelled Iranian concerns.

“I just heard that news as well,” Mombeini added.

“I hope FIFA steps in … we have always believed sport should be separate from politics. So in my view, FIFA has a duty to step in and ⁠make sure ​entry for all members of all World Cup teams is ​facilitated.”

Iran will play Gambia in a World Cup warm-up in Antalya on May 29, and Mombeini said the FFIRI was in the ​process of arranging another friendly for the training camp in Turkey.

-Reuters

Advertisement

Visit the Sports Village Square Channel:

https://www.whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vaz7mEIGk1FxU8YIXb0H

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Most Viewed