| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Juan Cruz Martin Manzano | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Mirza Basic | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which competitor will win the match titled "Basic vs Martin Manzano." It matters because it aggregates public expectations about the event outcome and responds to news that affects either participant.
The market is a binary contest between the two named athletes and will resolve to the officially declared winner of that match. Background items that commonly matter for this specific matchup include any prior meetings between Basic and Martin Manzano, their recent competitive form, and official event details such as weight class, format, and scheduled date — all of which should be checked on the event organizer's page. Closure time for this market is listed as TBD, so participants should monitor official announcements for scheduling or rule updates.
In this context, market prices reflect the collective assessment of which competitor the market expects to win and update as new, credible information arrives; they are indicators of consensus, not guarantees.
The market close time is currently TBD; the platform listing and the official event page will publish the final close time and any scheduling updates, so check those sources for the authoritative announcement.
Resolution follows the platform's published settlement rules for this market; typically that means the market uses the official decision from the event organizer and has specific provisions for postponement or cancellation — consult the contract rules on the market page for the exact treatment.
The market will resolve based on the official result provided by the event's governing body; if the official result is a draw, no-contest, or similarly ambiguous outcome, the platform's settlement rules for this market specify how such outcomes are handled (for example, voiding the market or applying tie rules).
Track official event communications (scheduling, weigh-ins, medical updates), credible reports about injuries or late changes, recent match footage and statistics for both competitors, and any statements from coaches or teams that could affect readiness or strategy.
Authoritative, time-sensitive news such as a reported injury, a failed weigh-in, or an official schedule change tends to move the market quickly; the size and persistence of the move depend on the credibility of the source and how close the news occurs to the scheduled event.