The first expanded World Cup, featuring 48 nations, 104 matches, and three host countries stretched from Vancouver to Mexico City, was always going to be a referendum on football's reach. A week in, the answer is arriving in scorelines that read like poetry. Consider Cape Verde. An archipelago of roughly half a million people, debutants on this stage, walking out to face Spain and walking off with a goalless draw intact, a result that detonated the betting markets and quietly redefined what minnow means. Beside them stands the continent's growing competence: Côte d'Ivoire's disciplined 1 to 0 win over Ecuador, Mohamed Salah's Egypt holding Belgium to 1 to 1, and Morocco, last cycle's semi-finalists, refusing to blink against Brazil to earn a 1-all draw. Not every story sang. Tunisia were dismantled 5-1 by Sweden, and South Africa fell 2 nil down to hosts Mexico in the tournament opener while Algeria lost 3-0 to cup holders, Argentina. Africa arrived not as a novelty but as a full spectrum: capable of brilliance and bruising in the same news cycle. Then there is Iran. A fourth consecutive World Cup, this one played largely on American soil, in the stadiums of a nation with which Tehran has shared decades of hostility and no diplomatic ties. Iran’s 2-2 draw with New Zealand will not headline the tactical reviews, but the image lingers: Iranian players competing freely in the very country cast as adversary, the anthem playing, the crowd on its feet. That is the strange grace of this sport. For ninety minutes, the geopolitics that set in capitals dissolve into something older and simpler, eleven against eleven, a ball, a shared willingness to be moved. The World Cup does not resolve the world's quarrels. It briefly suspends them, and in that suspension we glimpse what we so easily forget: that the things dividing us are smaller than the game we all agreed to love. What have we learned so far? The map of footballing power is widening, and the pitch remains the last truly neutral ground. Chris Emmanuel Kayoshe is a football fan and Key Accounts Manager at Mobile Money Rwanda.