Group H pits Spain’s pedigree, Uruguay’s steel, Saudi Arabia’s resilience and Cape Verde’s fairytale debut in a compelling World Cup clash.
That gives this group an immediate sense of contrast. Spain arrive as reigning European champions and one of the favourites, Uruguay bring old tournament pedigree and fresh Bielsa energy, Saudi Arabia return for another World Cup with upset potential, and Cape Verde step into the finals for the first time in their history.
The structure of the competition only adds to the tension. The top two teams in Group H will move into the round of 32, while the third-placed side can still advance if it ranks among the best third-place finishers across the competition. So this is not simply a race to finish first. It is a test of nerve, game-state management and timing, because one sharp performance or one flat evening can reshape the entire section before the final matchday arrives.
Group H features Spain, Cape Verde, Saudi Arabia and Uruguay. The official FIFA group focus page lists Spain’s coach as Luis de la Fuente, Cabo Verde’s as Bubista, Saudi Arabia’s as Georgios Donis and Uruguay’s as Marcelo Bielsa.
On paper, Spain and Uruguay carry the heavier resumes, but the group also contains a Saudi side with recent World Cup experience and a Cape Verde team whose qualification story has already made history.
Group H
- Spain
- Cape Verde
- Saudi Arabia
- Uruguay
Group fixtures
- 15 June: Spain vs Cape Verde, Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta.
- 16 June: Saudi Arabia vs Uruguay, Hard Rock Stadium, Miami Gardens.
- 21 June: Spain vs Saudi Arabia, Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta.
- 22 June: Uruguay vs Cape Verde, Hard Rock Stadium, Miami Gardens.
- 27 June: Cape Verde vs Saudi Arabia, NRG Stadium, Houston.
- 27 June: Uruguay vs Spain, Estadio Akron, Zapopan.
Spain
Spain come into the tournament with momentum and expectation in equal measure. FIFA’s team profile says Luis de la Fuente’s side will arrive in high spirits and among the favourites after winning UEFA EURO 2024, while the official group page lists this as Spain’s 17th World Cup appearance and notes that their best finish remains the 2010 triumph.
The pressure, then, is obvious. Spain have the tournament stature, the technical depth and the manager continuity to command a group like this, but the real test is whether they can turn control into knockout-stage force from the very start.
Managerial instincts
De la Fuente’s biggest strength with this group is familiarity. FIFA notes that he took charge in December 2022 after successful cycles with Spain’s youth sides, and that continuity has helped him shape a team that leans on technical security, midfield control and wide attacking thrust.
The expectation is that Spain will dominate territory, circulate possession quickly and compress opponents with an aggressive rest-defence shape behind the ball. That approach makes their group-stage rhythm crucial, because strong early control should allow them to dictate matches rather than chase them.
Key players
Rodri remains the side’s emotional and tactical hinge. He is arguably Spain’s most high-profile star, and while his club role has evolved in recent seasons, for the national team, he still provides the balance, tempo-setting and defensive reading that allows Spain’s attacking players to play higher and freer. Spain looks calmer when he controls the centre, and that becomes even more important after two injury-hit seasons that have made load management and sharpness part of his wider story.
Lamine Yamal is the lightning in the structure. FIFA’s squad announcement placed the teenage Barcelona superstar at the centre of Spain’s reveal, and he enters the World Cup as one of the main protagonists in the squad and the leading attacking reference on the right flank.
Spain will need Yamal not just to carry star billing, but to translate that into an end product in a national-team shirt. After an injury that cut short his club season, getting him quickly back into scoring rhythm could define whether Spain merely qualifies from the group or gathers the kind of attacking momentum required for a run deep into the competition.
Cape Verde
Cape Verde are the story that gives this group its edge. FIFA describes their road as a maiden World Cup journey, and the official group page confirms that they qualified as CAF Group D winners for their first finals appearance.
There is substance behind the romance, too. AP reported that Cape Verde won all of their home qualifying matches without conceding a goal, a detail that points to a side built on discipline, compactness and emotional control rather than mere novelty value.
Managerial instincts
Bubista has become inseparable from this rise. FIFA’s coverage of Cape Verde’s qualification says Pedro Leitão Brito, better known as Bubista, led the country to its first-ever World Cup, while FIFA’s squad announcement stressed that experienced figures such as Vozinha, Lopes, Mendes and Livramento headline a battle-tested group.
That points to a manager likely to trust structure over spectacle. Cape Verde should look to stay compact without the ball, protect their penalty area aggressively and then attack through direct wide outlets and transitional moments, which is the kind of setup that can make them awkward opponents in a short group stage.
Key players
Ryan Mendes feels like the tone-setter in attack. FIFA included him among the key figures in Bubista’s squad, and Cape Verde need his experience, ball-carrying and final-third calm if they are to turn isolated moments into territory, chances and belief against stronger opponents.
Roberto Lopes is just as important at the other end. FIFA’s qualification coverage and squad announcement both spotlight Lopes as one of the central figures in this historic group, and his reading of danger, aerial presence and organisational authority will be essential if Cape Verde are to keep games alive deep into the second half
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia returns to the global stage with familiarity and danger on their side. The official group listing marks this as their seventh World Cup appearance, achieved by winning AFC fourth-round Group B on 14 October 2025, while AP noted that this will be the Green Falcons’ third straight finals.
There is a clear spine to Georgios Donis’s squad. FIFA’s pre-tournament squad piece says the selection is headlined by captain and chief creative force Salem Al Dawsari alongside France-based defender Saud Abdulhamid, which neatly captures where Saudi Arabia’s invention and balance are likely to come from.
Managerial instincts
Donis appears set to build around competitive clarity rather than expansive risk. FIFA’s squad release underlined a core built largely from Saudi-based players, with Salem Al Dawsari the attacking leader and Saud Abdulhamid one of the most important defensive references, suggesting a setup designed around familiarity, shape retention and quick attacking releases.
Against Spain and Uruguay, Saudi Arabia are likely to spend stretches defending in a compact mid-block before springing forward through the wings and half-spaces. That makes their transitions, wide combinations and defensive concentration decisive if they are to challenge for second place or, at minimum, position themselves strongly in the third-place race.
Key players
Salem Al Dawsari is still the player who gives Saudi Arabia personality in advanced areas. FIFA explicitly labels him the team’s captain and chief creative force, and in a group where his side may need to create from wide positions and broken phases, his dribbling, delivery and ability to carry pressure on the wings become fundamental.
Saud Abdulhamid offers the counterweight. FIFA’s squad piece highlighted the France-based defender as one of the leading names in the squad, while his own FIFA interview referenced the value of his European learnings, and Saudi Arabia will need exactly that sort of composure and adaptability if they are to absorb pressure and hold their defensive line together.
Uruguay
Uruguay, as ever, bring history and menace in the same breath. They are two-time world champions, this is their 15th World Cup appearance, and they booked their place by finishing fourth in CONMEBOL qualifying on 4 September 2025.
The manager shapes the mood around them. FIFA said Marcelo Bielsa masterminded Uruguay’s qualification, and AP added that they finished ahead of Brazil in South American qualifying, a reminder of the level they had to navigate to reach North America.
Managerial instincts
Everything about Uruguay under Bielsa begins with intensity. FIFA’s profile of the coach says this will be Bielsa’s third World Cup as a manager, and his Uruguay side has already been framed by FIFA as one capable of mounting an assault on the tournament after a demanding qualification campaign.
That usually means front-foot pressing, vertical progression and a refusal to let matches settle into slow rhythms. Uruguay are unlikely to approach Group H passively, and their willingness to attack transitions early could make them the team best equipped to disrupt Spain while also overwhelming the group’s lesser-fancied sides.
Key players
Federico Valverde: The midfielder is the team’s de facto leader and competitive heartbeat from midfield. Uruguay need his authority, running power and shot threat to connect Bielsa’s intensity with real control, and his leadership and big-game experience around the national setup are central to their chances of not just qualifying but doing so with momentum.
Darwin Nunez: The striker could be the tournament swing factor. Bielsa’s Uruguay are at their most dangerous when the game becomes vertical and unstable, and that gives Nunez a platform to attack space, unsettle centre-backs and turn transition football into goals, which is especially important at a moment when the World Cup offers him a major stage after club-level difficulties.
Prediction
- Spain should win Group H, with Uruguay following them into the round of 32. Spain arrive as reigning European champions and one of the competition favourites, while Uruguay pair deep World Cup pedigree with a Bielsa side that came through South American qualifying in strong shape.
- Saudi Arabia looks the likeliest challenger for third place, and the format keeps that route alive because a third-placed finisher can still advance.
- Cape Verde may not have the same margin for error as the others, but their qualification story and defensive resilience suggest they will not simply decorate the group.
