After C Ronaldo's Teary Farewell, Polymarket Stages a 'Tear Verification' Drama

Odaily星球日报Published on 2026-07-08Last updated on 2026-07-08

Abstract

After Portugal's heartbreaking 0-1 loss to Spain in the 2026 World Cup Round of 16, a poignant image of a tearful 41-year-old Cristiano Ronaldo circulated widely, marking what he confirmed was his final World Cup match. This moment sparked not just emotional headlines, but a high-stakes debate on the prediction market Polymarket. The platform had an active market on "Will Ronaldo cry at the World Cup?" Despite the apparent visual evidence, the event entered a dispute phase. Polymarket's strict settlement rules required "clearly identifiable tears" on his face within the pitch or bench area, leading traders to dissect footage—arguing whether the moisture was tears, sweat, or a reflection. With the "Yes" probability plunging below 20%, the outcome hinged on rule interpretation. However, Polymarket issued a crucial clarification, stating that qualifying photo and video evidence showed "Cristiano Ronaldo crying, with visible tears on his face" on the pitch post-match. This official ruling caused an immediate and dramatic reversal, sending the "Yes" probability soaring above 99%. The event, which saw over $22 million in volume, highlighted a potential shift in Polymarket's approach, suggesting a move towards aligning outcomes with mainstream perception when rules allow, rather than being dictated solely by technical loopholes.

Original | Odaily Planet Daily(@OdailyChina)

Author | Asher(@Asher_ 0210)

Yesterday, Portugal lost 0-1 to Spain in the Round of 16 of the 2026 World Cup. In stoppage time, a headed goal from Mikel Merino knocked out the 41-year-old C Ronaldo and Portugal, barring them from the quarter-finals. Before the match, C Ronaldo had just confirmed this would be his final World Cup; after the match, he stood on the pitch, applauded the fans, wiped his eyes, and hugged Spain's young player Lamine Yamal.

“Farewell, Youth! 41-year-old C Ronaldo Tears Up After the Match, His Last World Cup Ends in the Round of 16.” Headlines like this flooded media and social platforms. For most people, that C Ronaldo cried is almost beyond dispute.

C Ronaldo covering his face post-match, visibly emotional

But according to Polymarket's settlement rules, whether “C Ronaldo cried” is truly a matter of debate.

C Ronaldo Crying or Not, Market Examines Frame by Frame

For Polymarket, where anything can be predicted, C Ronaldo's drama was naturally part of this World Cup. Long before the match started, the platform launched a prediction event – “Will Ronaldo cry at this World Cup?” (Link: https://polymarket.com/event/will-ronaldo-cry-at-the-world-cup-20260604013616610).

Common sense would suggest that the image of C Ronaldo with “tears in his eyes” after Portugal's elimination gave a clear answer. But on Polymarket, media reports and audience feelings aren't enough; ultimately, it comes down to the rules themselves.

According to the settlement rules for this event on Polymarket, only if a real photo or video clearly shows identifiable tears on C Ronaldo's face does it count as Yes; the crying must occur in the pitch or bench area, areas like the locker room or tunnel don't count; merely being emotional, having red eyes, wiping eyes, or watery eyes don't necessarily count.

Settlement details for “Will Ronaldo cry at this World Cup?” on Polymarket

Thus, the controversy quickly shifted from “Did C Ronaldo cry?” to “Does this drop of liquid count as a tear?”

Some argued that photos and videos were clear enough, showing tear stains on C Ronaldo's face; others insisted it could just be sweat, light reflection, or leftover moisture from exertion. A football pitch isn't exactly the ideal place for “tear verification” – sweat, camera cuts, and light glare all make the judgment more difficult.

Discussion among Polymarket heavy traders on whether C Ronaldo shed tears

This isn't the first time Polymarket has been caught up in rule definitions. Previously, events like “Does a partial U.S. government shutdown count as a shutdown?” sparked trader disputes due to grey areas between reality and market rules. This time, however, the controversial subject landed on that streak of moisture on C Ronaldo's face.

As a result, the event failed to settle twice yesterday and entered a dispute phase. As the dispute intensified, the Yes probability once plunged below 20%.

The “Will Ronaldo cry at this World Cup?” event failed to settle twice and is under dispute

At this stage, the market price no longer reflects just whether C Ronaldo cried, but rather traders' bets on rule interpretation, evidence quality, and the final arbitration outcome. Based on the experience of many disputed markets on Polymarket, once an event enters this phase of nitpicking rules and scrutinizing evidence, the final outcome often deviates from public intuition.

A Clarification Leads to a Major Reversal

Just as Yes holders almost resigned themselves to their positions going to zero, the supplementary rules updated by Polymarket official this morning instantly reversed the situation leaning towards No.

The clarification explicitly stated, “As of the time of this clarification's release, there exists qualifying photo and video evidence, taken on the pitch after the Portugal vs. Spain match, showing Cristiano Ronaldo crying, including visible tears on his face.”

Supplementary settlement rules updated by Polymarket this morning

In other words, regarding this disputed event, Polymarket official directly gave a clear stance: that streak of moisture on C Ronaldo's face counts as tears. Market sentiment swiftly reversed. The Yes probability, which had previously dropped below 20%, quickly skyrocketed to above 99%. The event's total trading volume exceeded $22 million.

After the supplementary rules were released, the probability for “Will Ronaldo cry at this World Cup?” surged to 99% in a short time

This controversial market saw a reversal with the release of Polymarket team's supplementary clarification. More importantly, this clarification sends a signal—when the rules themselves still have room for reasonable interpretation, the Polymarket team seems increasingly willing to align the outcome with common perception, rather than letting the market be skewed by rule-exploiting players.

In the past, the outcomes of many disputed markets on Polymarket often depended on who was better at finding loopholes or advantageous interpretations in grey areas. But this time, live footage, media reports, and supplementary evidence all pointed to C Ronaldo indeed shedding tears, and the official did not let the detailed debate over “sweat or tears” continue to dictate the settlement result.

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Related Questions

QWhat prediction event related to Cristiano Ronaldo was created on Polymarket during the 2026 World Cup?

AThe prediction event was 'Will Ronaldo cry at the World Cup?'

QAccording to Polymarket's original settlement rules, what specific criteria had to be met for the 'Cristiano Ronaldo crying' event to resolve as 'Yes'?

AFor the event to settle as 'Yes', clear photographs or videos had to show identifiable tears on Ronaldo's face. The crying had to occur on the pitch or in the technical/substitute area (not in the locker room or tunnel). Merely being emotional, having red eyes, wiping eyes, or having watery eyes did not necessarily count.

QWhy did the 'Will Ronaldo cry?' market initially go into a disputed state on Polymarket despite widespread media reports?

AIt went into a disputed state because there was debate over whether the moisture visible on Ronaldo's face in the images/videos were definitively tears, or if they could be sweat, water, or light reflection. The original strict settlement rules led to this ambiguity, causing two settlement attempts to fail.

QHow did Polymarket's official clarification change the outcome of the disputed market?

APolymarket's official clarification stated that qualified photo and video evidence, captured on the pitch after the Portugal vs. Spain match, showed Cristiano Ronaldo crying with visible tears on his face. This directly confirmed that the event criteria for 'Yes' were met, causing the market probability for 'Yes' to surge from below 20% to over 99%.

QWhat significant signal does the article suggest Polymarket's handling of this event may have sent to its users?

AThe article suggests that Polymarket's intervention signaled a potential shift towards aligning settlement outcomes with broad public perception and available evidence, rather than allowing the result to be dictated solely by technical rule interpretations or 'loophole' players in ambiguous situations.

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