'Greatest feeling ever': Cape Verdeans tell BBC of joy at holding Spain to draw
The streets of Cape Verde's capital, Praia, shook to the deafening sounds of vuvuzelas, chants and car horns, after the Blue Sharks held European champions Spain to a 0-0 draw in their World Cup opener. Though the sides shared the points, for many Cape Verdeans it felt more like
The streets of Cape Verde's capital, Praia, shook to the deafening sounds of vuvuzelas, chants and car horns, after the Blue Sharks held European champions Spain to a 0-0 draw in their World Cup opener.
Though the sides shared the points, for many Cape Verdeans it felt more like a win.
"It was an emotional moment," said Isa Conceiรงรฃo, a supporter who was watching the match from a packed fan zone.
She, like thousands of other attendees, was dressed in a blue national team jersey to show pride in her country's World Cup exploits. Much of the island nation erupted in wild celebrations at the final whistle.
"Being a small country and being able to achieve such a good result against Spain, a football powerhouse, is the greatest feeling ever," she told the BBC.
Men, women, and children were all dancing to the rhythm of the official World Cup song released by the Cape Verdean Football Federation.
As the beats of "nos รณra dja txiga" played through the fan zone, supporters chanted along in excitement โ some waving the national flag. The word is Cape Verdean Creole for "our time has come."
It seemed a fitting phrase after the small country of about half a million people edged continental giants, Cameroon, to qualify for the World Cup for the first time in history.

