| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fight ends before round 2 | 19% | 10¢ | 19¢ | — | $49 | Trade → |
| Fight ends before round 3 | 35% | 20¢ | 25¢ | — | $45 | Trade → |
This market asks which round the Caio Borralho vs. Reinier de Ridder fight will finish in. It matters because finish timing reflects matchup dynamics — styles, conditioning, and gameplans — and is useful for bettors and fans tracking in-fight expectations.
Caio Borralho and Reinier de Ridder are established middleweight competitors known for different primary skill sets; both have demonstrated the ability to end fights rather than only go to decision. Their matchup draws interest because stylistic contrasts (striking versus grappling-heavy approaches) often determine whether fights end early or later. The market remains open until the event operator and platform set a final close time (listed here as TBD).
Market prices reflect the aggregate view of traders about which round the fight will end in and update as new information arrives (camp reports, injuries, official start time). Use movements in the market to understand how expectations shift, but not as a fixed prediction — they change as fight-day information becomes available.
The listing shows the close time as TBD; typical practice is for markets on specific fight outcomes to close at or just before the scheduled start of the bout or when the promoter confirms the official start time. Monitor the market page for an updated close timestamp.
Outcome labels are defined on the market page — they commonly represent mutually exclusive finish windows (for example, specific round ranges or 'fight lasts the distance'). Check the market interface to see the exact wording for this two-outcome market since label definitions determine what you are trading.
Consider each fighter’s preferred finish methods (strikes, submissions), takedown frequency and control, ability to impose pace, and past patterns for when they have secured or suffered stoppages; these factors together shape whether finishes tend to occur early or in later rounds.
Different rule sets (round length and count, clinch/grappling allowances), the presence of a cage versus a ring, and local officiating styles can favor either faster stoppages or longer grappling battles, so confirm the promotion’s ruleset and venue details for this specific fight.
Look at each fighter’s most recent fights and opponents with similar styles — note the rounds in which they both secured or conceded finishes, how they performed late in fights, and any remnant effects from recent bouts (injuries, recovery time). Comparative trends against grapplers or strikers are especially informative for this matchup.