| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Air Force | 5% | 4¢ | 5¢ | — | $23K | Trade → |
| Nevada | 96% | 96¢ | 97¢ | — | $18K | Trade → |
This market lets traders express expectations about the outcome of the Air Force at Nevada game — a head-to-head contest between the Air Force Falcons and the Nevada Wolf Pack. It matters because game results reflect team performance, affect season standings, and are influenced by situational factors that markets rapidly incorporate.
Air Force and Nevada are regular competitors within the Mountain West Conference and have faced each other across multiple seasons in both football and basketball schedules. Air Force programs are often characterized by disciplined execution and situational, time-of-possession approaches, while Nevada teams have frequently leaned on tempo and playmaking offense; coaching changes, season timing, and roster turnover shape how those identities translate each year.
Market odds aggregate traders’ views about which team will win and update as new information arrives. Use odds as a real-time signal of consensus expectations, but pair them with situational context (injuries, weather, venue) when forming your own view.
The two outcomes correspond to which team wins the game outright (Air Force wins vs. Nevada wins). Settlement follows the official final result as defined by the relevant league, including overtime if applicable; platform-specific voiding rules apply if the contest is canceled.
The market close is listed as TBD; typically markets close at or just before the official kickoff once a start time is set. Settlement uses the league's official final score and follows any platform rules about suspended or postponed games.
'At Nevada' means the Wolf Pack is the home team in Reno at their sport-appropriate venue (e.g., Mackay Stadium for football, Lawlor Events Center for basketball). Home advantage influences crowd effects, travel fatigue for Air Force, and local conditions such as weather or altitude.
Monitor injury reports, announced starting lineups (especially at quarterback or primary scorers), last-minute suspensions, and any coaching staff changes or stated game plans. Special teams availability and key backups are also market-moving information.
Head-to-head history provides narrative context but is less predictive than current-season indicators such as form, injuries, and matchup fit; markets tend to weight recent, directly relevant information more heavily than distant past results.