Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni has warned his players against treating Cape Verde as an easy route into the next round, insisting the World Cup debutants have earned their place in the knockouts.
The defending champions face Cape Verde in the Round of 32 at Miami Stadium, July 3rd.
On paper, the gap is obvious. Argentina carry the crown, the pedigree and the pressure. Cape Verde carry the freedom of a team that has already made history and has nothing to lose.
That is exactly why Scaloni is refusing to let Argentina relax.
Scaloni Rejects Easy-Game Talk
Scaloni said Argentina are in a good moment, but warned that the knockout stage leaves no space for complacency.
“We’re in a good moment, but now the margins are very small,” Scaloni said. “This is a match where if you lose, you’re out. We know that.”
ESPN also reported that Scaloni warned Argentina not to underestimate Cape Verde ahead of the Round of 32 tie.
The Argentina coach said Cape Verde were not in the knockouts by accident, pointing to their organisation, defensive discipline and counter-attacking threat.
“They’re a good team,” Scaloni was quoted as saying. “We are not surprised, to be honest. They are a good team, and they are not here by chance. We must respect them and that’s what we will do.”
This is not a match to admire from a distance. It is a match to control before it becomes dangerous.
Cape Verde Carry Underdog Power
Cape Verde’s presence in the knockout stage has become one of the tournament’s strongest underdog stories.
They reached this stage unbeaten after three draws against Spain, Uruguay and Saudi Arabia.
Several reports have also framed Cape Verde as a historic World Cup debutant and one of the most surprising teams in the knockout round.
Their strength is not built on star power. It is built on structure.
Scaloni said Cape Verde closed down inside channels well and carried danger on the counter-attack.
That matters against Argentina because knockout matches can turn on one loose pass, one transition or one set-piece moment.
Argentina may dominate possession. But Cape Verde only need the game to stay alive long enough for pressure to shift.
Argentina Must Manage The Moment
Argentina enter the tie with expectation because champions are judged differently.
A narrow win can be treated as a warning. A slow start can become a crisis. A shock defeat would become one of the tournament’s defining stories.
That is why Scaloni’s message is less about fear and more about control. He wants Argentina to respect Cape Verde early, before the match becomes emotional.
Cape Verde have already shown they can survive difficult games. Scaloni said there were matches where the African side deserved more, including the draw against Saudi Arabia.
That warning should travel through Argentina’s dressing room. Cape Verde may be the underdogs, but they are not a free pass.
Champions Face A Trap Door
For Argentina, the task is clear: start fast, score before anxiety grows, and stop Cape Verde from turning belief into pressure.
For Cape Verde, the path is just as clear: stay compact, frustrate the champions, and wait for the one moment that can change a knockout tie.
Argentina have the crown. Cape Verde have the dream.
In a World Cup knockout match, that is enough to make the favourite uncomfortable.