In that sense, victory and defeat were not verdicts upon the entire process—they were observations of a single realization from a far larger landscape of possibilities.… By the time the quarterfinals of the 2026 FIFA World Cup arrived, the world’s football databases had already swollen to impossible proportions. Every sprint had been measured by local positioning systems embedded in players’ vests during training. Every official match had produced synchronized optical tracking at 25 frames per second, generating millions of positional coordinates. Clubs had contributed years of event data: pressures, progressive passes, expected threat values, defensive compactness, recovery runs, goalkeeper positioning, and physiological workloads. Large language models summarized tactical meetings, while reinforcement-learning simulators evaluated hypothetical substitutions that had never actually occurred. To most viewers, however, everything collapsed into one number. 2–1. ...