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NASA's crazy promise to send a soccer ball to the moon if the U.S. wins World Cup gold
SE⚽ Sports2 days ago

NASA's crazy promise to send a soccer ball to the moon if the U.S. wins World Cup gold

NASA's chief, Jared Isaacman, has promised to send a soccer ball to the Moon if the United States wins the FIFA World Cup. This statement was made during a promotional event where NASA had already sent an official soccer ball to the International Space Station (ISS) as part of the co-hosting arrangement for the 2026 World Cup by the U.S., Mexico, and Canada. Isaacman emphasized that if the U.S. team succeeds in winning the tournament, they would send a soccer ball further into space than ever before. The promise received support from NASA's lunar base program head, Carlos Garcia-Galan, who stated that there would likely be room for such a mission. The U.S. team is set to face Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Round of 16 match.

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SVT Nyheter logoSVT NyheterState / PublicCenterFactual 85Objective 702 days ago
NASA's crazy promise to send a soccer ball to the moon if the U.S. wins World Cup gold

NASA's chief, Jared Isaacman, has promised to send a soccer ball to the Moon if the United States wins the FIFA World Cup. This statement was made during a promotional event where NASA had already sent an official soccer ball to the International Space Station (ISS) as part of the co-hosting arrangement for the 2026 World Cup by the U.S., Mexico, and Canada. Isaacman emphasized that if the U.S. team succeeds in winning the tournament, they would send a soccer ball further into space than ever before. The promise received support from NASA's lunar base program head, Carlos Garcia-Galan, who stated that there would likely be room for such a mission. The U.S. team is set to face Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Round of 16 match.

Bias read (Center): The article discusses a promotional gesture by NASA related to the FIFA World Cup, which falls under sports journalism. There is no significant political controversy or framing that suggests bias. The content is primarily informational and does not take a stance on any political issue.

Why these scores (Factual 85 · Objective 70): The article accurately reports on NASA's pledge by Jared Isaacman to send a soccer ball to the moon if the US wins the World Cup. It references past actions like sending a ball to the ISS and mentions support from NASA officials. The factuality is high as it aligns with known statements from Isaacma

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