| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Winnipeg wins by over 1.5 goals | 35% | 35¢ | 36¢ | — | $229 | Trade → |
| Chicago wins by over 1.5 goals | 24% | 22¢ | 25¢ | — | $160 | Trade → |
| Chicago wins by over 2.5 goals | 12% | 12¢ | 13¢ | — | $144 | Trade → |
| Winnipeg wins by over 2.5 goals | 22% | 25¢ | 27¢ | — | $6 | Trade → |
This market asks how the point spread will resolve for the Chicago at Winnipeg matchup — who covers and by what margin. It matters for traders and bettors assessing relative team strength and expected game margin.
Chicago and Winnipeg meet with factors like travel, home-ice conditions in Winnipeg, and recent form shaping expectations; past head-to-head results and roster continuity also provide context. Goaltending matchups, injury lists, and special-teams performance have historically driven the final margins in games between these clubs.
Market prices reflect collective expectations about the final margin relative to the posted spread rather than a simple win/loss. Interpret movement as changing market-implied views on which side is likeliest to cover, and treat prices as signals to compare against your own edge.
A 'TBD' close typically means the platform has not posted a fixed lock time yet; most spread markets lock at or shortly before the game's scheduled start. Check the market page and platform notifications for the final lock time, which may update as the game start time is finalized.
Four-outcome spread markets commonly divide possible final-margin ranges around the posted spread (e.g., multiple cover/loss intervals). The exact intervals and settlement rules are defined on the market page, so review the outcome descriptions there before trading.
Settlement conventions vary by market; some spreads use the score at the end of regulation while others include overtime/shootout. Confirm the event-specific settlement rule on the market details to know which final score is used.
Injury news and confirmed starting-lineup announcements often produce rapid price movement, especially for key players and starting goaltenders; traders usually react as soon as credible reports or official confirmations appear.
Focus on recent head-to-head margins, changes in goaltending and defensive personnel since those games, and how each team performed in similar venue and scheduling conditions (home vs road, back-to-back situations). Use trends rather than isolated past scores.