Team USA dominates Paraguay 3-0 in World Cup opener as crypto prediction markets and sponsorships take center stage

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The United States men’s national team opened the 2026 FIFA World Cup with a statement, racing to a 3-0 lead over Paraguay at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California on June 12, 2026.

Folarin Balogun scored twice, at the 31st minute and deep into first-half stoppage time at 45’+5. Paraguay’s Damián Bobadilla had already done the Americans a favor with an own goal in the 7th minute, setting the tone early.

Prediction markets called it, sort of

On Polymarket, the leading crypto-native prediction platform, the USMNT carried an implied win probability of roughly 46-50% heading into the match. That’s favored, but not overwhelmingly so. Paraguay’s physical style and World Cup pedigree made oddsmakers cautious.

The match generated significant trading volume on prediction platforms, reinforcing a trend that’s been building for years. Crypto-native prediction markets have carved out a niche as an alternative to traditional sportsbooks, offering permissionless access and transparent settlement.

Kraken plants its flag

Three days before kickoff, on June 9, Kraken was announced as the Official Crypto Exchange Supporter of the 2026 FIFA World Cup. It’s a sponsorship that puts a major exchange’s branding in front of billions of viewers across a tournament that, for the first time, features 48 teams spread across the United States, Canada, and Mexico.

Historical echoes and home-field advantage

Here’s a detail that feels almost too perfect to be real: the last time the US played Paraguay in a World Cup was in 1930, at the inaugural tournament in Uruguay. The result? A 3-0 US victory. Nearly a century later, the scoreline repeated itself.

For crypto investors watching the intersection of digital assets and global sports, prediction market volumes during World Cup matches will serve as a proxy for mainstream adoption of these platforms. The risk, as always, is that crypto sponsorships draw regulatory scrutiny. Several jurisdictions still treat prediction markets as unlicensed gambling, and a high-profile World Cup could attract the attention of regulators who have thus far taken a hands-off approach.

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