| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vitality | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| 9z | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market covers which team will win Map 2 of the BLAST Open Rotterdam 2026 match between 9z and Vitality. Map-level markets matter because map outcomes reflect specific tactical matchups, map-pool strengths, and veto dynamics that differ from match-level forecasts.
BLAST Open Rotterdam is part of the BLAST tournament circuit and typically features high-level international teams in BO1/BO3 formats depending on stage; map markets activate when a match progresses to a second map under the event's format. Vitality is an established European organization with a history of deep event runs, while 9z is a Latin American roster that has shown the ability to upset higher-ranked opponents on favorable maps.
Market odds are the aggregated view of traders and adjust to live information such as veto results, lineup confirmations, and late-breaking news; treat them as dynamic indicators of market sentiment rather than guarantees of outcome.
Map 2 is played whenever the match format and in-match results require a second map—e.g., a BO3 that continues past the first map or any stage where the event schedule specifies multiple maps. If the match is a BO1 or is forfeited before a second map, Map 2 will not occur.
The event's veto/pick procedure determines which physical map is played as Map 2; in many BO3 sequences the second pick becomes Map 2, but formats vary by stage and tournament rules, so check the live veto broadcast or BLAST rule sheet to see the exact order for this match.
Watch the final map veto results, confirmed starting lineups and any announced substitutes, official match start time or delays, and any last-minute infractions or rulings from tournament admins that affect eligibility or map choice.
Past matchups are useful mainly when they are map-specific and recent; prioritize recent encounters on the same map and consider whether either side has had roster or stylistic changes since those matches, as stale data can misrepresent current matchups.
Substitutions and delays can materially change map-level expectations—especially if key roles (AWPer, IGL) are affected—so markets typically react to that information; a delay can also push the market closing time or liquidity, so confirm event timing and the tournament's official communications.