| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fight goes the distance | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the Casey O'Neill vs. Gabriella Fernandes fight will 'go the distance' — that is, be decided by the judges rather than ending by stoppage. It matters because fight duration shapes fighter records, matchup narratives, and how traders respond to new information on fight night.
This is a single-outcome market tied to the scheduled contest between two professional mixed-martial-arts fighters; the official closing and settlement will follow the event's posted result and the exchange's rules. Background relevant to this matchup includes each fighter's recent bout-ending tendencies, training-camp reports, and any late changes such as injuries or weight issues.
Prediction market prices aggregate participants' expectations about whether the fight reaches the final bell and will move as fresh information arrives. Treat market prices as real-time consensus signals, not guarantees of the outcome.
‘Going the distance’ means the contest reaches the end of its scheduled rounds and is decided by the judges’ scorecards; a draw or decision counts as going the distance, while a KO, TKO, submission, or stoppage before the final bell does not.
The market's close time is listed as TBD; settlement will follow the official result published by the event's sanctioning body and the exchange’s stated settlement rules. If the bout is postponed or rescheduled, the platform typically updates or pauses the market in accordance with its rulebook.
Styles matter: a matchup where both competitors prioritize striking exchanges or have histories of late-round control tends to favor decisions, while a bout featuring fighters with high finishing rates or one dominant grappler can increase the chance of an early stoppage.
Late news commonly shifts market expectations: an injury or visible weight-cut trouble can increase the chance of an early stoppage or corner retirement, while a late replacement with a different style can change the tradeoff between finishing and decision outcomes.
If the fighters have not previously met, there is no head-to-head history to reference; traders instead rely on each fighter’s recent performances, fight lengths, and matchup-specific attributes when assessing whether this bout will go the distance.