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Mentions OPEN

Announcers at College Basketball West Coast conference tournament

📊 $3K traded 🏦 Source: Kalshi
Total Volume
$3K
Open Interest
2,726
Active Markets
17
Markets
17

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Prices in cents (1¢ = 1%). Trade on Kalshi.

All Outcomes (17)
Outcome Probability Yes Bid Yes Ask 24h Change Volume
March Madness 44%
39¢ 44¢ $1K Trade →
Double Double 67%
55¢ 66¢ $903 Trade →
Event does not qualify 1%
$273 Trade →
Alley-oop 36%
15¢ 31¢ $134 Trade →
Overtime 32%
29¢ 32¢ $127 Trade →
Orleans Arena 83%
67¢ 82¢ $70 Trade →
Airball / Airballs / Airballed 75%
59¢ 75¢ $24 Trade →
Record 76%
57¢ 75¢ $21 Trade →
Schedule 66%
39¢ 59¢ $17 Trade →
Walk On 25%
16¢ 21¢ $17 Trade →
Elbow 72%
57¢ 72¢ $4 Trade →
Transfer / Transferred 78%
74¢ 78¢ $4 Trade →
Recruit / Recruited / Recruitment 56%
47¢ 56¢ $2 Trade →
NIL 26%
13¢ 26¢ $1 Trade →
Ankle 58%
25¢ 49¢ $1 Trade →
All American / All America 72%
37¢ 55¢ $1 Trade →
Draft / Drafted 0%
23¢ 43¢ $0 Trade →

About This Market

This market tracks which announcers will be credited or mentioned during broadcasts of the West Coast Conference (WCC) college basketball tournament. It matters because announcer assignments are driven by network rights and production decisions and shape the broadcast experience.

The WCC tournament is an annual conference championship with games carried by regional and national broadcasters under existing rights agreements. Networks and production crews typically assign announcers based on season-long pairings, travel logistics, and ratings priorities; those assignments are sometimes adjusted for marquee games or last‑minute conflicts. Kalshi hosts this market so participants can express expectations about which announcers will be featured or mentioned.

Market prices reflect the collective expectation about which named announcer(s) will be credited or mentioned under the market's settlement rules; they update as new information arrives but should be read as market sentiment rather than a definitive announcement. Always consult the market's official rules and settlement description to interpret outcomes correctly.

Key Factors

Frequently Asked Questions

How does this market define a 'mention' or 'announcer' for the WCC tournament?

The market follows the settlement definition posted on its page; typically a 'mention' or 'announcer' is the individual officially credited on the primary broadcast feed (as shown in network credits, conference release, or the archived broadcast). Check the market description for the exact rule used to determine the winning outcome.

When will this market settle and how will the winning outcome be determined?

Settlement timing and procedures are set by the market's official rules and are listed on the market page; in practice settlement occurs after official broadcast credits or authoritative conference/network confirmations are available, and the outcome matching those official sources will be declared the winner.

If multiple announcers work different games during the tournament, how does that affect which outcome wins?

That depends on the market's design: some 'mentions' markets pay out if an announcer is credited at least once across the tournament, while others may target announcers for a specific game (e.g., the championship). Consult the market's outcome definitions to see whether multiple appearances qualify an outcome.

What sources are used to verify which announcers are credited for settlement?

Settlement typically relies on authoritative sources such as the official broadcast credits from the network, the conference or league's official game reports or press releases, and archived video of the broadcast; the market page lists the prioritized sources used for verification.

Can last-minute substitutions, simulcasts, or alternate feeds change the market outcome?

Yes—substitutions, illness, alternate local announcers, or simulcasts can change which names appear in official credits. How those scenarios are treated depends on the market's settlement rules (for example whether the primary national feed or any credited feed is used); participants should follow official updates and the market's rulebook.

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