| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tie | 25% | 22¢ | 27¢ | — | $66 | Trade → |
| Cerezo | 46% | 44¢ | 48¢ | — | $18 | Trade → |
| Shimizu | 0% | 27¢ | 35¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which of three outcomes—Cerezo win, draw, or Shimizu win—will occur in the Cerezo vs Shimizu match. It matters because it lets fans and traders express expectations and see how consensus shifts as new information arrives.
Cerezo Osaka and Shimizu S‑Pulse are professional Japanese clubs with differing styles: Cerezo often emphasizes technical possession play and youth development, while Shimizu is known for an attacking approach. Past meetings, squad changes, and recent form all shape expectations for this fixture; off-field factors such as schedule congestion or travel can also influence performance.
Market odds are a real‑time aggregation of participants' expectations and available information; they indicate market sentiment rather than a definitive prediction. Treat odds as a snapshot that will update as lineups, injuries, or other news arrive.
The event page lists the market close as TBD; check the platform for the official close time. Markets for live matches commonly close shortly before kickoff or when official schedules are finalized.
This market offers three outcomes: Cerezo win, draw, and Shimizu win. Settlement typically follows the official match report for the full‑time result in regulation; review the market's specific rules for handling postponements, cancellations, or administrative decisions.
Rapid moves usually reflect new information—confirmed starting XI, an injury, a red card, or weather/venue updates—or a large trade in a thin market. Verify any related news sources before assuming the move reflects a lasting change in fundamentals.
Head‑to‑head history provides context and can reveal stylistic advantages, but recent form, current squad status, and immediate match circumstances typically have greater predictive value.
Low total volume indicates limited liquidity: prices can swing sharply on small trades and the market consensus may be less reliable. If liquidity is low, treat odds cautiously and corroborate with independent information such as confirmed lineups and expert match previews.