What does the GoalPulse HTML sitemap include?
It groups core coverage pages, 12 groups, 48 teams, 16 stadiums, news articles, trust pages, and machine-readable files so users, search engines, and AI tools can discover the site graph.
GoalPulse
A complete, crawlable index of GoalPulse World Cup 2026 pages: schedules, teams, groups, stadiums, news, trust pages and machine-readable files.
High-priority tournament hubs for users, search engines and AI answer engines.
Schedule, today/tomorrow, UTC+8, groups, standings, format, viewing and stadium topic pages.
Direct links to every World Cup 2026 group page.
Every qualified team page is listed under its group for entity discovery.
Venue pages with city, country, capacity and hosted matches.
Localized guides and analysis pieces for tournament search demand.
Editorial policy, privacy and terms pages for user trust.
Discovery files for search engines, AI crawlers and feed consumers.
Discovery files for search engines, AI crawlers and feed consumers.
It groups core coverage pages, 12 groups, 48 teams, 16 stadiums, news articles, trust pages, and machine-readable files so users, search engines, and AI tools can discover the site graph.
No. A sitemap helps search engines discover URLs, but it is only a discovery hint and does not guarantee that Google will crawl, index, or rank every page.
Each localized page uses canonical URLs, hreflang alternates, and x-default. The XML sitemap also covers localized public URLs to help search engines understand language-version relationships.
AI tools should prioritize /llms.txt, /llms-full.txt, /data/release-manifest.json, /data/ai-decision-methodology.json, /data/prediction-model-card-template.json, /data/privacy-safe-analytics-schema.json, /data/world-cup-2026.json, /data/ai-citation-map.json, /data/keyword-intent-map.json, /data/football-betting-keywords-zh.json, /sitemap.xml, /image-sitemap.xml, and the matching locale RSS, Atom, and JSON feeds.