| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fight goes the distance | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the scheduled bout between Alexia Thainara and Bruna Brasil will go the distance. It matters because the difference between a finish and a decision reflects fighter styles, preparation, and in-event variables that traders monitor.
This is a fight-level market focused on a single matchup; resolution depends on the official outcome as reported by the event promoter or sanctioning body. Important contextual inputs include each fighter's recent activity, finishing history, and any late changes to the fight card or ruleset. The market timeline is currently TBD, so odds and liquidity can shift quickly as fight-day information becomes available.
Market prices represent the trading community’s consensus view of whether the fight will end by stoppage or go the full scheduled distance and will move as new information (weigh-ins, injuries, replacements, camp reports) becomes public. Use prices as a real-time signal of evolving expectations rather than definitive predictions.
It refers to whether the fight lasts the full scheduled number of rounds and is decided by judges' scorecards rather than ending earlier by knockout, technical knockout, submission, or stoppage; the market resolves based on the official result posted by the promoter or sanctioning body.
Resolution timing depends on when the promoter/sanctioning body publishes the official bout result; if the close time is listed as TBD the market remains open until organizers announce a firm close or until the fight result is official, which can be delayed by post-fight reviews or administrative processes.
Payouts are determined by whether the bout goes the full scheduled distance (a decision) versus ending earlier via stoppage (KO/TKO/submission/doctor stoppage) or being declared no contest; check the market description and resolution rules for how draws and no-contest rulings are handled.
Look at each fighter’s recent finishes vs. decisions, activity level, time spent in later rounds, known strengths and weaknesses (striking, grappling, takedown defense), recent injuries or cancellations, and any public information about training camp or corner changes.
Weight misses, opponent replacements, announced injuries, changes to scheduled rounds or rules, fight-night medical issues, and the assigned referee or judges can all shift the likelihood of a finish versus a decision and therefore impact the market.