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2 sources checked · 2 source groups included · 20m ago

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We asked our AI model to simulate the World Cup 100,000 times. Here are the results

There are 48 teams, 104 matches and infinite possibilities at the World Cup. We crunched the numbers to find every team’s probability of success.

1 Left1 Center0 Right
Still watching. Optics is waiting for a cleaner match before calling the split.

STILL WATCHING

As of June 12, 2026 at 1:52 AM, this is how Optics News reads the wording differences in this story.

What happened There are 48 teams, 104 matches and infinite possibilities at the World Cup. We crunched the numbers to find every team’s probability of success.
The headline split The headlines are mostly aligned. The differences are small wording choices, not a major framing split.
Match confidence Developing. The source map is still developing. Keep watching for more sources to join.
Same-event confidenceDeveloping

Not enough sources yet to confirm this is the same specific event.

WHAT EACH SIDE EMPHASIZED

Left / center-leftWe asked our AI model to simulate the World Cup 100,000 times. Here are the results

The Age (Australia) · Center-left · News report

CenterWe asked our AI model to simulate the World Cup 100,000 times. Here are the results

The Sydney Morning Herald · Center · News report

Right / center-rightNo matching source in this bucket yet.

Optics keeps watching for pickup.

SEE THE HEADLINES

C · CenterHigh
The Sydney Morning HeraldNews report · Jun 12, 1:52 AM

We asked our AI model to simulate the World Cup 100,000 times. Here are the results

There are 48 teams, 104 matches and infinite possibilities at the World Cup. We crunched the numbers to find every team’s probability of success.

Open source
CL · Center-leftMostly Factual
The Age (Australia)News report · Jun 12, 1:52 AM

We asked our AI model to simulate the World Cup 100,000 times. Here are the results

There are 48 teams, 104 matches and infinite possibilities at the World Cup. We crunched the numbers to find every team’s probability of success.

Open source
Details0/99 Wording Gap · Low confidence · 2 sources
0/99 Wording GapLow confidence2 sources · 2 bias bucketsDeveloping · 2 sources · 2 bucketsFormats: News report

SOURCE MAP CHANGES

Jun 12, 1:52 AM: The Sydney Morning Herald joined the source map.

Jun 12, 1:52 AM: The Age (Australia) joined the source map.

Now: Wording Gap is 0/99 and story health is developing · 2 sources · 2 buckets.