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On paper this is the most lopsided tie of the round of 32, and the price says so: Argentina are 1.18 to win in 90 minutes, Cape Verde 28.00. But the occasion is historic. Cape Verde — a nation of roughly 525,000 people — are the smallest country ever to reach the knockout stage of a men’s World Cup, and they meet the holders, an Argentina side that has conceded just one goal all tournament. This is a data preview of a mismatch with a genuine story attached.

The Numbers That Matter
| Metric | Argentina | Cape Verde |
|---|---|---|
| Win odds (90 min) | 1.18 | 28.00 |
| Group finish | Won Group J (9 pts, 3/3) | 2nd Group H (3 draws) |
| Goals conceded (tournament) | 1 | — |
| Recent run | 10 straight wins | Unbeaten in the group |
| Talisman | Messi — 6 goals | GK Vozinha (40) — 7 saves v Spain |
Odds (aggregated decimals) and tournament data as of 3 July 2026. Draw priced at 9.00.
The gap is stark. Argentina won all three group games, conceded just once across the group, and arrive on a 10-match winning run. Lionel Messi, at 39, has scored six of Argentina’s eight goals across the North American group phase and sits level at the top of the Golden Boot race on six.
The Cape Verde Story
Cape Verde’s presence in the last 32 is one of the tournament’s defining upsets. They reached the knockouts as debutants and did it without winning a group game — three draws, against Spain, Uruguay and Saudi Arabia — which makes them the first side to advance from a World Cup group without a victory since Chile in 1998, and the first debutant nation to reach the knockouts since Slovakia in 2010. The emblem of that run was 40-year-old goalkeeper Josimar "Vozinha", who made seven saves in a goalless draw with Spain.
Team News
Argentina welcome Cristian Romero back after a knee knock, though full-back Gonzalo Montiel is reported out with a hamstring issue. Cape Verde carry knocks of their own, with Telmo Arcanjo a doubt after a muscle problem. None of it changes the shape of the tie: Argentina are expected to dominate possession and territory, and Cape Verde’s route to a result runs entirely through Vozinha and a deep block.
Conditions in Miami
The tie is at Hard Rock Stadium, an open-air venue with a canopy that provides shade but no air-conditioning. With a 6:00 pm local kick-off the worst of the day’s heat has passed, though the heat index climbed to around 105°F earlier, and there is a 50% chance of showers or thunderstorms after 2 pm — a possible factor if the game is interrupted.
The Verdict
Cold read: at 1.18 there is no value in backing Argentina to win outright, and 28.00 on Cape Verde is a lottery line rather than a bet. If you are looking for the realistic questions, they are about margin and clean sheets — Argentina have kept teams out all tournament, and Cape Verde have scored just twice in the whole competition (Varela and Pina, one each). The likeliest script is a controlled Argentina win; the interest is whether Vozinha can make it another famous afternoon for the minnows.
For the rest of the day’s card, see our 3 July predictions; for what comes next, the Round of 16 preview and the Argentina team page.
- Argentina (1.18) are overwhelming favourites; there is no betting value at the price, and Cape Verde (28.00) is a longshot only.
- Argentina have conceded just one goal all tournament and arrive on a 10-match winning run; Messi is level top scorer on six.
- Cape Verde are the smallest nation ever to reach a men’s World Cup knockout stage and advanced without a group win — a genuine tournament story.
- Goalkeeper Vozinha (40), who made seven saves against Spain, is Cape Verde’s key man.
- Kick-off is Saturday 10:00 AM NZST at an open-air Miami venue, with an evening heat index and a chance of thunderstorms.
Odds shown are aggregated decimals as of 3 July 2026 and are for analysis only. Betting carries risk — stake only what you can afford to lose. For New Zealand support, see Responsible Gambling.