| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BUF Sabres | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| SJ Sharks | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This prediction market asks which team will win the Buffalo at San Jose game and serves as a way to aggregate public expectations ahead of the matchup. It matters because it summarizes how traders react to pregame news, injuries, and lineup announcements.
The event is a head-to-head game with Buffalo visiting San Jose, so travel, time-zone differences, and home-ice factors are relevant. Historical performance, roster changes, recent form and goaltending trends typically shape expectations for either side without relying on a single statistic.
Market prices on this contract reflect the collective view of traders and will move as new information (starting goalies, injuries, scratches, travel status) becomes available. Use prices as a real-time signal of sentiment, but always cross-check with official lineup and injury reports.
This market presents two mutually exclusive outcomes—Buffalo wins or San Jose wins. The contract will resolve to the winner as defined by the platform's settlement rules; check the event page for whether resolution is based on regulation time only or includes overtime/shootouts.
The close time is marked as TBD for now; typically markets close shortly before puck drop to prevent trading on live-game information. Watch the event page for an exact close timestamp and time zone.
Monitor confirmation of each team's starting goaltender, the health and availability of top-line forwards and top-pair defensemen, and any late scratches. Power-play quarterbacks and key penalty killers are especially influential in single-game markets.
A long road trip and westbound time-zone change can affect performance through fatigue and disrupted routines; number of rest days and whether the team is mid-trip or just starting it are important context to evaluate.
$0 volume simply means no trades have been executed yet on this market; it does not indicate the likelihood of an outcome. Low or zero volume implies thinner liquidity—prices (when trades occur) may be more sensitive to individual bets and to new information.