| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fight goes the distance | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the Brad Tavares vs. Eryk Anders fight will go the distance — i.e., reach the final bell and be decided by the judges. That outcome matters to bettors because a decision result reflects pacing, durability, and matchup dynamics rather than a finish.
Brad Tavares and Eryk Anders are veteran middleweights with contrasting skill sets: Tavares is known for technical striking and a measured pace across many fights, while Anders has shown power and finishing ability in portions of his career. The matchup is often framed as a clash between durability/volume and explosive finishing threats, with recent activity, injuries, and camp preparation shaping expectations.
Market odds express collective sentiment about whether this specific fight will reach a judges’ decision and update as new information arrives (injury reports, weigh-ins, etc.). Interpret them as a snapshot of participant expectations about the likelihood of a decision versus a finish, not an exact prediction.
The close time is listed as TBD by the market; most platforms close markets at or shortly before the scheduled fight start and settle once the official result is posted by the promotion and athletic commission. Check the exchange’s event page for the platform’s exact close and settlement rules.
For this event, 'Go the Distance' means the bout reaches the final bell and is decided by the judges’ scorecards. Any stoppage before the final bell (KO/TKO, submission, doctor or corner stoppage, disqualification) is considered not going the distance; technical outcomes are resolved according to the platform’s rulebook and the official event result.
Relevant factors include Tavares’s historical tendency to favor technical striking and measured pacing, his recent frequency of decisions versus finishes, and his demonstrated cardio and ability to maintain output into later rounds.
Key considerations are Anders’s history of early stoppages when he lands heavy strikes, any patterns in his cardio or late-round durability, and how his striking versus wrestling balance has influenced past fight outcomes.
A doctor or corner stoppage before the final bell is treated as a stoppage (not going the distance). Accidental fouls that lead to a no contest or a technical decision are handled according to the exchange’s resolution rules and the official record from the athletic commission, so consult the market rules for those scenarios.