Updated
Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jun 29
Cape Verde Reaches World Cup Last 32 on 3 Points as 48-Team Format Fuels Debate
Updated
Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jun 29

Cape Verde Reaches World Cup Last 32 on 3 Points as 48-Team Format Fuels Debate

3 articles · Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jun 29

Summary

  • Cape Verde advanced to the World Cup knockout stage on just 3 points, finishing second in a group with Spain and Uruguay to set up a last-32 tie with Argentina in Miami.
  • The surprise run became the clearest case for FIFA's 48-team expansion, which also sent first-time knockout qualifiers Bosnia-Herzegovina, Canada, Ivory Coast and South Africa through, while nine of Africa's 10 teams reached the last 32.
  • The same format drew criticism because third-placed teams advanced and head-to-head replaced goal difference as the first tiebreaker, leaving four group winners and five eliminated teams with a game to spare.
  • Group-stage jeopardy for major nations largely vanished: 11 of 12 top seeds avoided elimination, 18 matches were won by three or more goals, and scoring hit 2.99 goals per game—the highest for this stage since 1998.
  • That contrast left FIFA with compelling underdog stories but fresh questions over competitive balance, especially after weak returns from Asia and Concacaf outside the co-hosts.

Insights

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