| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fight goes the distance | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the scheduled bout between Charles Johnson and Bruno Silva will go the full scheduled distance (i.e., be decided by the judges rather than ending early). It matters because the outcome signals expectations about each fighter's durability, finishing ability, and fight tempo.
Charles Johnson vs. Bruno Silva is a matchup that will be shaped by each athlete's recent form, style matchup, and the rules and round length agreed for the bout. Historical tendencies (how often each fighter has been stopped or finished) and recent activity — camps, injuries, and weight-cut results — provide context for how likely a finish is. Since the event closing time is TBD, markets will incorporate late-stage information such as official weigh-ins and any bout changes.
Market odds represent the aggregated expectations of traders and will shift as new, verifiable information arrives; they are not guarantees. Watch for movement after official updates—weigh-ins, medical reports, and last-minute replacements tend to produce the largest shifts.
It means the fight lasts all scheduled rounds and is decided by the judges’ scorecards rather than ending earlier by knockout, technical knockout, submission, or disqualification.
Resolution is based on the event operator’s official result: a completed judges’ decision counts as 'go the distance'; a no-contest or a bout that never takes place typically triggers the platform’s cancellation/void rules or a rescheduling procedure—check official market updates for the specific resolution policy.
A tough weight cut or a missed weight can affect cardio, hydration, and mental state, which can increase the chance of an early finish or a cancellation; a confirmed catchweight or financial penalties may also alter strategies and how the market prices the outcome.
Short-notice replacements typically increase uncertainty and volatility: a new opponent’s style and ring rust are often less predictable, so markets usually move as participants reassess finish likelihood given the replacement’s record and stylistic matchup.
Key movers include official weigh-in outcomes, medical/injury reports, confirmed scratches or replacements, visible issues at open workouts, and any commission rulings or fight-night logistical changes; these items materially change expectations about whether the fight will end early.