So the footballing world has paused to salute Cape Verde. How very noble. How very British. Our own fans, we are told, have hailed the ‘underdog spirit’ of this tiny archipelago after they secured a historic World Cup draw. One can almost hear the collective sigh of patronising delight from every pub in England. We love an underdog, don’t we? As long as the underdog remains safely beneath us. The moment Cape Verde actually wins, the narrative will shift: they become a threat, a fluke, an inconvenience to our own grand ambitions. This is the paradox of the British sports fan: we adore the plucky loser, but we despise the genuine competitor.
Let us examine this ‘underdog spirit’ more closely. What does it actually mean? It means we celebrate a team that, by virtue of its small population and limited resources, is not expected to succeed. We pat them on the head for trying hard. We applaud their ‘heart’ and ‘determination’. We turn them into mascots for our own charitable self-image. But strip away the sentimentality, and what remains? Cape Verde has still never won a World Cup match. Its players will return to obscurity after the tournament, their moment of fame a mere curiosity for the global footballing establishment. The British fans who ‘hail’ them today will forget their names tomorrow.
This is not a celebration of sporting excellence. It is a celebration of the status quo. We love the underdog because the underdog reaffirms the hierarchy. David beats Goliath once in a thousand attempts, and that one victory becomes a myth. The other 999 defeats are conveniently forgotten. We invest in the exception because it allows us to ignore the rule: that success is overwhelmingly determined by wealth, infrastructure, and historical advantage. Cape Verde’s draw is a statistical blip, not a revolution.
Compare this to the Victorian era, when the British Empire exported football to the world as a civilising mission. Then, the underdog was the colonial subject who needed to learn the game properly. Today, the underdog is the ex-colonial who is allowed to play but not to win. The narrative has shifted from paternalism to patronisation, but the underlying assumption remains: we are the centre, and they are the periphery.
I am not arguing that Cape Verde does not deserve its moment. They do. But let us be honest about what this moment represents. It is a feel-good story for the comfortable, cheap catharsis for those who will never experience genuine struggle. True sporting competition is not about ‘spirit’ but about results. And until Cape Verde starts winning consistently, their World Cup draw will remain precisely what it is: a footnote in the history of a sport that worships the powerful and condescends to the weak.
The British fan’s love of the underdog is, at bottom, a love of themselves. It is the smug satisfaction of being the magnanimous giant who can afford to be generous. Cape Verde, in this narrative, exists only as a canvas for our own virtue. They are not protagonists. They are props.
So by all means, raise a glass to Cape Verde. But do not mistake sentiment for solidarity. The underdog spirit is a myth we tell ourselves to feel better about a world that is brutally unfair. And in football, as in life, the strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must.
Arthur Penhaligon








