In the upcoming FIFA World Cup game between South Africa and Canada, scheduled for June 28 at 3:00 PM ET: This market will resolve to "Over" if there are 11 or more total corners taken in this game (combining corners for both teams). If the total number of corners is fewer than 11, this market will resolve to "Under". Markets on number of corners refers to number of corners taken and not corners awarded. If the game is postponed, this market will remain open until the game has been completed. If the game is canceled entirely, with no make-up game, this market will resolve 50-50. This market refers only to corners taken within the first 90 minutes of regular play plus stoppage time. Corners awarded but not taken will not count. Corners awarded during extra time or penalty shootouts do not count. The primary resolution source for this market is the official statistics of the event as recognized by the governing body or event organizers. However, if the governing body or event organizers have not published final match statistics within 24 hours after the event's conclusion, a consensus of credible reporting may be used instead. All markets will settle based on the official final result as recognized by the governing body or event organizers. Revisions to officially declared final scores made after market resolution will not be accounted for in determining the outcome.
Key risk: match_postponement_or_cancellation
AI updated 6/26/2026, 3:47:11 PM
In the upcoming FIFA World Cup game between South Africa and Canada, scheduled for June 28 at 3:00 PM ET: This market will resolve to "Over" if there are 11 or more total corners taken in this game (combining corners for both teams). If the total number of corners is fewer than 11, this market will resolve to "Under". Markets on number of corners refers to number of corners taken and not corners awarded. If the game is postponed, this market will remain open until the game has been completed. If the game is canceled entirely, with no make-up game, this market will resolve 50-50. This market refers only to corners taken within the first 90 minutes of regular play plus stoppage time. Corners awarded but not taken will not count. Corners awarded during extra time or penalty shootouts do not count. The primary resolution source for this market is the official statistics of the event as recognized by the governing body or event organizers. However, if the governing body or event organizers have not published final match statistics within 24 hours after the event's conclusion, a consensus of credible reporting may be used instead. All markets will settle based on the official final result as recognized by the governing body or event organizers. Revisions to officially declared final scores made after market resolution will not be accounted for in determining the outcome.
Crowd Consensus
50%
ORYN Consensus
50%
Signal Score
0.0
Opportunity
0.0
Graph Relationships
ORYN is polling its model network — Claude, GPT, Gemini and more — for this market. The consensus and per-model dissent will appear here.
Regime: — · Confidence: 0%
The prediction market for 'Over/Under 10.5 Total Corners' in the South Africa vs. Canada FIFA World Cup match is evenly split, with a 50% probability for both outcomes. The neutral stance reflects the lack of clear historical or contextual bias favoring either team in corner statistics.
A bullish outcome (Over 10.5 corners) could be driven by high-tempo play from both teams, aggressive attacking strategies, or poor defensive organization leading to frequent set-pieces. Canada's youthful squad may press aggressively, while South Africa's counter-attacking style could also generate corners. Historical World Cup data suggests an average of ~10 corners per match, making the over marginally more plausible.
A bearish outcome (Under 10.5 corners) may result from a low-scoring, tactical match with both teams prioritizing defensive solidity. Poor weather conditions (e.g., heavy rain) could reduce the number of set-pieces. Alternatively, a dominant team suppressing the opponent's attacks might limit corner opportunities. Canada's inexperience in high-pressure games could lead to fewer attacking phases.
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South Africa vs. Canada: O/U 10.5 Total Corners is tracked on ORYN with data sourced from polymarket. Current market-implied probability is 50% while ORYN AI estimates 50%.
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