How the data model works
Each public data point should explain what fans can compare: World Cup 2026 predictions, bracket picks and global ranking signals.
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Sincronizando dados da Copa 2026.
PredictTheCup
The data page explains the prediction model behind PredictTheCup, including which entities are available and which aggregates are not yet public.
Prediction data is useful only when its meaning and status are clear. This page connects brackets, teams, countries and rankings while distinguishing the current model from aggregates that still need production verification.
Each public data point should explain what fans can compare: World Cup 2026 predictions, bracket picks and global ranking signals.
The highest-value fields include predicted champion, predicted finalist, user country, bracket completion status, team popularity, upset picks and update timestamp.
When an aggregate is unavailable, the page states that clearly. This prevents estimates from being mistaken for verified facts.
| Feature | Current scope | How it helps |
|---|---|---|
| Data model | Predictions, brackets, teams, countries | Core entities for global fan prediction analysis. |
| Platform scope | World Cup 2026 predictions and bracket activity | Describes the product without claiming unpublished totals. |
| Aggregate status | Awaiting verified data | Values will appear after enough verified prediction activity is available. |
See aggregate metrics.
Create the data through user predictions.
Read how prediction data is used.
PredictTheCup is structured to track brackets, champion picks, finalist picks, team popularity, country trends and ranking signals.
Not yet. The current page describes the data model without publishing unverified champion, finalist or country totals.
Country comparisons can be published when there is enough privacy-safe data and a clearly stated sample size.
Live aggregates for champion picks, finalists, popular teams, upset picks and prediction trends by country should be connected.