Christian Pulisic, widely considered the face of American soccer, called his 2026 World Cup performance “disappointing” after the US Men’s National Team crashed out in the round of 16 with a 3-1 loss to Belgium on July 6. Zero goals. One assist. An early exit in the 59th minute with a right foot injury. For a player with 33 goals in 90 international appearances, the tournament was, to put it gently, not the coronation moment many had priced in.

The prediction market angle

Pulisic’s disappointing run illustrates a persistent tension in these markets. Star players attract outsized betting interest relative to their actual probability of delivering specific outcomes. Former USMNT legend Carli Lloyd and other analysts publicly expressed disappointment over Pulisic’s lack of star-level impact during the tournament. That kind of consensus expectation, the belief that a known quantity will perform to his ceiling on the biggest stage, is precisely what prediction markets are supposed to capture and correct.

Why sports betting tokens keep finding a floor

This is a fundamentally different value proposition than traditional sportsbooks. Decentralized prediction markets settle transparently on-chain, reduce counterparty risk, and in some cases allow users to trade positions before an event concludes. When Pulisic limped off the field in the 59th minute against Belgium with the score already at 3-1, holders of “USMNT to advance” positions on prediction platforms could watch the real-time probability collapse and exit if liquidity allowed. Traditional sportsbooks don’t offer that kind of granularity.