#广场预测世界杯赢40000U The first 16 matches of the World Cup had 8 draws! Let's see which AI prediction is stronger?



The US, Canada, and Mexico World Cup enters its sixth match day tonight. Over the past five days, 8 group stage matches have been played in the first round of 16 games. Surprisingly, this year, 8 of the 16 matches ended in draws. On the fifth match day, all 4 games were draws, especially Cape Verde, making its World Cup debut, holding powerful Spain to a 0-0 draw. Who would have expected this before the match?
The first draw of this year's World Cup occurred on June 13 in Group B, when Canada hosted Bosnia at Toronto's stadium and the game ended in a tie. Bosnia scored from a corner kick in the first half, and in the second half, Canada relied on substitute Ralston's volley to equalize. This was Canada's first point in the World Cup. On June 14, in another Group B match, Qatar surprisingly held European powerhouse Switzerland to a draw. After the first round, all four teams had scored 1 goal, conceded 1 goal, and had 1 point, with all goal differences at zero—amazing!
The third draw this year came on June 14 in Group C, where Morocco, the last semifinalist, faced five-star Brazil and was not outclassed. In the 21st minute, Dias assisted Sabiri to score with a chip, and in the 32nd minute, Vinicius equalized for Brazil. Ultimately, the two teams shook hands.
The fourth draw was on June 15 in Group F, where Japan faced the Netherlands. The Netherlands took the lead in the 51st minute with Van Dijk heading in from a Herenveen assist, but six minutes later, Japan's Kubo Kaito scored from outside the box after a deflection. Dumfries scored in the 64th minute to help the Netherlands lead 2-1 again, but Japan had another chance in the 89th minute. Kagawa Koki headed the ball, which hit Kamada Daichi and deflected into the net, ending in a 2-2 draw with the powerful Netherlands.
On June 16, the first round of Group G and H matches took place. In Group G, Belgium faced Egypt. Egyptian star Salah assisted a teammate with a long-range shot to open the scoring. In the second half, Belgium's substitute Lukaku scored an own goal, resulting in a 1-1 draw between the European Red Devils and the African powerhouse. In the Iran vs. New Zealand match, New Zealand scored twice early, but resilient Iran equalized twice, ending 2-2. Iran maintained its undefeated record in the first round among Asian teams. After the first matches, all four teams in Group G had 1 point, keeping the qualification suspense alive.
In Group H, Spain faced Cape Verde, producing the biggest upset of this World Cup. Facing the debuting African island nation, Spain, ranked 3rd in the world and valued at over 1.2 billion euros, had 27 shots and 10 on target but were all saved by 40-year-old goalkeeper Vozinha. The incredible goalkeeper made 7 crucial saves, keeping Spain scoreless—does human skill surpass divine intervention?
In another Group H match, Saudi Arabia took the lead in the first half thanks to Al-Maliki's goal. Uruguay launched 27 attacks throughout the game. It wasn't until the 80th minute that Araujo scored from a low shot to the far corner to equalize. Saudi goalkeeper Osvaldo's miraculous performance helped Saudi Arabia hold Uruguay to a 1-1 draw. After the first round, all four teams in Group H had 1 point, maintaining qualification suspense.
So far, after 16 group stage matches, there have been 8 draws: 5 with 1-1, 2 with 2-2, and 1 with 0-0. On June 16, all 4 matches ended in draws, setting a World Cup record for four draws in a single day—something even powerful AI tools didn't predict.
Lenovo Group and Migu Video jointly launched the "World Cup Prediction Human-Machine Battle" during this World Cup, aggregating predictions from 12 major AI models. The statistical results for 15 matches are as follows:
Baidu Wenxin predicted 7 matches correctly, with a 46.7% success rate, ranking first; Lenovo Tianxi AI, China Mobile Jiutian, Tencent Hun Yuan, and MiniMax each predicted 6 matches correctly, with a 40.0% success rate; DeepSeek, Tongyi Qianwen, Zhipu, Jiezhu Xingchen, and SenseTime Little Raccoon each predicted 5 matches correctly, with a 33.3% success rate; Kimi and iFlytek Spark each predicted 4 matches correctly, with a 26.7% success rate.
A common point among these AI models is that their accuracy in predicting draws is the lowest. Out of the 12 AI models, only 4 correct predictions involved draws: Tencent Hun Yuan, Kimi, iFlytek Spark predicted Canada 1-1 Bosnia; Jiezhu Xingchen predicted Belgium 1-1 Egypt. In other words, AI's accuracy in predicting draws is significantly lower than its performance in non-draw matches.
There are 8 more group stage matches remaining, with giants like France, Argentina, Portugal, and England set to appear. Who knows what surprises will happen next? What AI tools are you using for your predictions?
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discovery
· 20m ago
2026 GOGOGO 👊
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HighAmbition
· 1h ago
thnxx for the update
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BlackBullion_Alpha
· 1h ago
Bull Run 🐂
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BlackBullion_Alpha
· 1h ago
HODL Tight 💪
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SeaOfCloudsWithoutMountains
· 1h ago
Buy the dip 😎
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ybaser
· 1h ago
Just charge forward 👊
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