On July 6, Portugal lost 0-1 to Spain and was eliminated. On Polymarket, the settlement probability for the market "Cristiano Ronaldo will cry at the World Cup" fell instead of rising, dropping from about 70% (which had been maintained for a long time before the match) to about 20%. As of the time of reporting, the market's trading volume has exceeded $5 million, and after multiple submissions of a "No" outcome, it has entered a dispute process. Global mainstream media described Ronaldo's farewell to the World Cup with words like "tears" or "tearful exit."
According to Polymarket's market rules, the settlement standard for "Cristiano Ronaldo will cry at the World Cup" is: during this World Cup, when Ronaldo is on the pitch or in the substitute area, a real photo or video must clearly show visible tears on his face to settle as "Yes." The rule does not assess whether Ronaldo is sad, nor does it adopt emotional language from the media; it relies solely on visual evidence from the footage. This strict quantitative standard is the fundamental reason for the significant divergence between the market probability and global media reports.
According to reports, since the start of this World Cup, the Polymarket market probability for "Will Cristiano Ronaldo cry at the World Cup?" had long remained around 70%, with the market assuming Ronaldo would almost certainly cry after Portugal's elimination. After Portugal lost 0-1 to Spain and was eliminated, the actual situation was contrary to market expectations; instead of rising, the probability fell to about 20%. As of the time of reporting, the market's trading volume has exceeded $5 million, and after multiple submissions of a "No" outcome, it has officially entered a dispute resolution process.
According to PolyBeats monitoring, Ronaldo has had clearly recorded crying moments in two previous major tournaments:
According to reports, after Portugal's elimination on July 6, 2026, multiple mainstream media outlets described Ronaldo's exit in emotional language: ESPN said his World Cup dream ended "in tears"; The Independent and New York Post directly wrote that he "cried" or "left in tears"; Reuters' caption also used the phrase "crying as he left the pitch." Social media simultaneously packaged this defeat as a "tearful farewell moment" for Ronaldo's World Cup career.
However, Polymarket's settlement rules require clearly visible tears in the footage, not media interpretations of emotion or departure atmosphere. This divergence directly led to the abnormal movement of the market probability and triggered a dispute process for the $5 million market.
According to reports, Polymarket is headquartered in New York, officially launched in 2020, and is currently the largest prediction market globally. It uses Circle's USDC stablecoin (digital dollar) for trading. Traders can predict FIFA match results, Bitcoin prices, election outcomes, government shutdowns, and many other events. Final payouts depend on whether the prediction matches the standards set by each market.
According to Polymarket's market rules, the settlement standard is: during this World Cup, when Ronaldo is on the pitch or in the substitute area, a real photo or video must clearly show visible tears on his face to settle as "Yes." Emotional language from the media is not adopted.
According to reports, after Portugal lost 0-1 to Spain and was eliminated, the probability, which had been around 70%, fell instead of rising, dropping to about 20%. Market trading volume has exceeded $5 million, and after multiple submissions of a "No" outcome, it has entered a dispute process.
According to PolyBeats monitoring, after Portugal's elimination by Morocco at the 2022 World Cup, Ronaldo cried alone in the player tunnel; at the 2024 European Cup, after missing a penalty against Slovenia, Ronaldo broke down crying on the pitch. Both incidents have clear video records.
Related News
C's last World Cup concludes, POR fan token drops 5.6%
Argentina vs Egypt: Behind the 73% win rate, why is the prediction market so bullish on Argentina?
Ronaldo World Cup Exit Sparks $2.6M Polymarket Prediction Debate
39% vs 35%: Why is the United States vs. Belgium the hardest match to price in the World Cup Round of 16?