| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| COL Avalanche | 57% | 56¢ | 57¢ | — | $44K | Trade → |
| ANA Ducks | 43% | 42¢ | 43¢ | — | $28K | Trade → |
This market tracks a head-to-head sporting matchup titled "Colorado at Anaheim," where a Colorado team visits an Anaheim team; it matters because markets aggregate real-time expectations about which side will win. Traders use the market to express views, hedge exposures, or wager on the outcome before kickoff/puck-drop/mound time.
Depending on the league associated with the listing, this matchup commonly refers to either an NHL game (Colorado Avalanche at Anaheim Ducks) or an MLB game (Colorado Rockies at Los Angeles Angels) — confirm the league tag on the market page. Home advantage, travel, recent form, and roster availability are typical contextual factors that shape pregame expectations for these teams.
Market odds represent the collective view of traders and move as new information arrives; interpret them as a live indicator of sentiment rather than a permanent prediction. Because odds update continually, use them alongside independent information (lineups, injuries, weather, starting pitchers/goalies) when forming a view.
The event title indicates a Colorado team visiting an Anaheim team; check the market's league or event metadata to confirm whether this is NHL (Avalanche vs Ducks) or MLB (Rockies vs Angels) and any associated season/date information.
The market shows a close time of TBD; typically markets close at the official scheduled start time (puck-drop/kickoff/first pitch) or at the time specified by the listing. Some markets close earlier if the organizer enforces lineup locks or if play is postponed.
This listing has two outcomes: Colorado wins or Anaheim wins. Settlement depends on the market's rules—some markets include overtime/shootout results in the official winner while others settle on regulation-only outcomes—so check the event rules on the market page.
Late roster news can move the market quickly because key absences (starting pitcher/goalie or top-line players) materially change win expectations; traders monitor official team reports, injury lists, and reliable beat writers for the most actionable information.
Volume indicates the amount of money matched in the market and is a proxy for liquidity and trader interest; higher volume generally means larger orders can be absorbed without as much price impact, while lower volume can lead to more volatile prices around new information.