A 40-year-old goalkeeper from a country of roughly 600,000 people just stared down one of the best national teams on the planet and didn’t blink. Cape Verde’s historic 0-0 draw against Spain on June 15, 2026, wasn’t just a result. It was the kind of moment that reminds you why the World Cup still has the power to stop the world mid-scroll.
Vozinha, Cape Verde’s veteran shot-stopper, turned in a performance so dominant that he was named the Michelob ULTRA Superior Player of the Match. In the process, he became the oldest player to appear in a nation’s first-ever World Cup match. At 40, most keepers are coaching youth academies. Vozinha was busy denying Spain’s attack and earning his country their first World Cup point in history.
David holds Goliath to a stalemate
Spain entered the match ranked 2nd in the world. Cape Verde sat at approximately 67th. That’s not a gap. That’s a canyon.
Cape Verde’s path to even reaching the 2026 World Cup was itself a breakthrough moment. The island nation, an archipelago off the west coast of Africa, had never qualified for the tournament before.










