| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duke | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Charleston | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market lets traders take positions on which team will win the Charleston at Duke game. It matters because market prices aggregate public information about team news, matchups, and other factors that can affect the game outcome.
Duke is the home team and typically represents a high-profile program from a power conference, while Charleston is a visiting mid-major program; matchups between teams like these can highlight contrasts in depth, athleticism, and style. Meetings may be infrequent, so recent form, roster availability, and coaching adjustments are often more relevant than long-ago results. Because the scheduled close time is TBD, participants should monitor official game and market announcements for timing and status updates.
Market odds reflect how traders collectively price the probability of each team winning and move in response to new information like injuries or lineup changes. Use odds movements as signals about developing information, but remember they are market estimates rather than guarantees.
Each outcome corresponds to which team wins the game: one contract resolves if Charleston wins and the other if Duke wins. Settlement is based on the official final result as defined by the exchange.
The market's close time is set by the exchange and listed on the market page; when marked TBD, expect the market to close either shortly before the scheduled start or when the exchange confirms the game's official start time—check the market page for the confirmed closing timestamp.
Official starting lineup announcements, injury reports, and coach confirmations are highly relevant and often cause rapid market movement; prioritize credible, official sources and look for confirmation before the market closes.
Past head-to-head results provide context but are less predictive than current-season form, roster changes, and matchup dynamics; use historical trends as one input among several rather than a sole decision factor.
Settlement follows the exchange's official rules—typically the final, official game result after regulation or overtime. In-game events can move market prices while trading is open, but the final official outcome recorded by the exchange determines payoffs; consult the market rules for specific edge-case procedures.