Spain vs Cape Verde: the rout that may never arrive
There are matches where the bookmaker has run out of questions. Spain at 1.09 against a World Cup debutant tells you the obvious: the European champions are not, in any sane universe, an upset waiting to happen. So the line shrugs and shifts the intrigue elsewhere — into the total, where Over 3.5 sits at a confident 1.86, and into a handicap that quietly assumes Spain will steamroll. In other words, nobody asks who wins. They ask by how much. And on that second question, I find the consensus a touch greedy.
The missing chaos
Here is the detail the market seems to underweight. Spain's two most explosive wide weapons — Lamine Yamal and Nico Williams — are being carefully managed after fitness niggles, and De la Fuente has signalled they will not start. The plan, per local reporting, is minutes off the bench, an hour later against Saudi Arabia, full throttle for Uruguay. So the opening XI remains elite — Rodri, Fabián, Pedri running the show — but it is built for patient combination play, not the dribble-and-mayhem that breaks a low block in the first twenty minutes.
That matters, because Cape Verde will sit deep, narrow and disciplined in a compact 4-2-3-1. And against exactly this kind of crowded centre, Spain have stalled before: a sterile 0-0 with Egypt despite an extra man, a long, frustrating first half before Eswatini cracked. The pattern repeats — territory dominated, the first goal delayed, then a calm 2-0 or 3-0 rather than a goal avalanche.
A manager in no hurry
De la Fuente himself called this "the most important match of the World Cup" and warned anyone expecting a stroll. That is not the language of a coach chasing a cricket score from minute one; it is the language of a man who wants a controlled, sensible debut with legs preserved for the harder games ahead.
Cape Verde, for their part, arrive with genuine belief — 3-0 over Serbia, 3-0 over Bermuda — and Bubista insisting they came "not just to participate." They are organised and transition-capable. The likely shape is control, a goal that takes its time, and a managed finish. Four goals is a real possibility, but far less inevitable than 1.86 suggests.








