| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tie | 0% | 0¢ | 11¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| California wins 1st half | 0% | 33¢ | 47¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Florida St. wins 1st half | 0% | 50¢ | 64¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will be leading at the end of the first half of the California vs Florida St. game. It matters for traders and fans who want to take a short-term view on which side starts stronger before the second half.
California and Florida State are collegiate programs with different seasonal strengths, styles, and personnel that influence how they play early in games. First-half outcomes often reflect opening-game plans, initial matchups, and whether either team emphasizes fast starts or second-half adjustments. Historical head-to-heads and recent form can offer context but do not determine a single result.
Market prices represent the collective expectation of which team will be ahead at the official end of the first half; they update as new information (lineups, injuries, weather, public betting) becomes available. Treat prices as a synthesis of available information rather than final prediction guarantees.
The three outcomes correspond to California leading at the official end of the first half, Florida State leading at that time, or the score being tied at the end of the first half.
This market resolves when the game’s official scorekeeper records the end of the first half; the platform will use that official game clock and score to determine the outcome. The market may also close for trading shortly before kickoff or when the platform announces closure.
Late changes to starting players or unexpected absences typically move market prices because they alter projected matchups, rotation depth, and immediate scoring/defensive capacity for the first half.
The designated 'tie' outcome is the winner in the event the official first-half score is exactly even at the conclusion of the first half.
Early turnovers, red-zone or paint scoring efficiency, special teams events (for football), and any official rulings or injuries that occur before the half are the primary in-game triggers that can change trader expectations and market pricing.