SPANISH INQUISITION

ATLANTA, GA — In the lead-up to the opening Group H World Cup clash at Atlanta’s cutting-edge Mercedes-Benz Stadium, the face of 18-year-old Lamine Yamal is impossible to miss. Towering billboards featuring the teenage Barcelona winger line the city’s skyscrapers, a clear signal of just how much hype surrounds the young star — and that hype just became necessity for the reigning European champions, who now find themselves pinning their World Cup hopes on his precocious talent. Pre-tournament title favorites Spain stumbled badly out of the gate in their first match, grinding to a lifeless 0-0 draw with World Cup debutants Cape Verde, a result that has sparked widespread questions about the squad’s ability to deliver on their pre-tournament promise.

Yamal, who missed nearly two months of action with a nagging hamstring injury and was only just returning to full match fitness, was held in reserve by head coach Luis de la Fuente until the final 25 minutes of the clash. Even in that limited playing time, and despite failing to break the deadlock, his introduction immediately shifted the dynamic of the match. For the 68,000 fans packed into the stadium, most of whom had turned out to catch a glimpse of one of the game’s brightest young stars, Yamal’s arrival finally gave the crowd something to cheer for. Spain’s slow, methodical passing attack, which had struggled to create any clear chances against a compact Cape Verde defense, finally gained a cutting edge: Yamal’s ability to run at defenders stretched the opposition’s backline and opened up space for his teammates.

“Lamine is undoubtedly a special player,” said Spanish midfielder Mikel Merino after the final whistle. “He has great ability to beat his man and disrupt the opposition’s defensive shape. Given Lamine’s quality, he can influence any game at any moment.”

Yamal catapulted to global stardom just two years ago, when he turned in a series of stunning performances as a 16-year-old to help Spain claim the Euro 2024 title. Alongside Nico Williams, the explosive winger on the opposite flank, Yamal formed one of the most dangerous attacking duels in international football, blending blistering speed, close control, and consistent goal threat that tore through opposition defenses at the Euros. But like Yamal, Williams has also battled injury issues this season, and he only saw action in the final minutes of stoppage time against Cape Verde.

Without both wingers’ elite one-on-one ability to unlock packed defenses, Spain slipped back into the familiar pattern of World Cup underperformance that has plagued the side since they lifted their only World Cup trophy in 2010. In the 16 years since that triumph, La Roja have won just three of their 12 World Cup matches, with a recurring tendency to dominate possession without turning that control into goals. Against Cape Verde, ranked 67th in the FIFA world rankings, that trend held: Spain controlled the ball for most of the 90 minutes but failed to register a single goal, echoing their toothless displays against Japan and Morocco at the 2022 World Cup, where they accumulated over 2,500 passes before finally finding the back of the net.

“Lamine showed exactly what he’s capable of the moment he stepped onto the pitch,” de la Fuente told reporters after the match. “He forced the opposition to change their approach, but that was the amount of playing time we felt was right for him given his recent injury.”

The Spain manager has urged fans and pundits alike not to panic following the opening draw, pointing to the side’s impressive 32-game unbeaten streak in competitive matches that stretches back more than three years. Yamal echoed that calm tone in a post-match social media post, writing, “Don’t have any doubt. We know this is a long competition and the objective is still far off. We will keep working and everything will work out how we want.”

The expanded 48-team format of this World Cup does give title contenders room to build momentum gradually, and a single win in their remaining two group stage matches against Saudi Arabia and Uruguay would almost certainly be enough to book Spain a spot in the knockout rounds. But the opening clash has made one thing unavoidable: Yamal is central to Spain’s dream of lifting a second World Cup trophy, a reality that has put unexpected pressure on de la Fuente to start the teenager against Saudi Arabia in Atlanta on Sunday — potentially earlier than the manager planned when the tournament began.

Just days before the tournament kicked off, de la Fuente boasted that his squad’s depth made it the strongest contender in the competition. But after the underwhelming opening draw, La Roja now look heavily reliant on their teenage superstar — and on him staying fit through the grueling, expanded schedule of the weeks ahead.