Welcome to The Athletic’s daily World Cup cheatsheet, your guide to which teams are up, which are down — with the data analysis to back it up.We will unpack the key talking points from each matchday and give you the stats you need to stay in the know. And if you want to go deeper don’t worry, we will point you in the direction of some of The Athletic’s best World Cup coverage.What happened on day five of the World Cup?Four draws in one day. Correction: four entertaining draws in one day. We began with one of the shocks of the century, as Cape Verde held European champions Spain to a 0-0 in Atlanta. Then came an excitingly-even contest between Belgium and Egypt in Seattle that ended 1-1, followed shortly afterwards by another 1-1 draw between Saudi Arabia and Uruguay in Miami. The day was rounded out by an absorbing game between Iran and New Zealand in Los Angeles. Twice the Oceania representatives took the lead through Elijah Just, twice Iran hit back.It is just the second day in World Cup history to see four draws on a single day after June 15, 1958. To put that into context, that day was the week after the birth of Prince, but two weeks before current Austria head coach Ralf Rangnick was born.Now let’s run a vibe check on each side who played today.