| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Columbia | 34% | 33¢ | 36¢ | — | $261 | Trade → |
| Harvard | 65% | 62¢ | 65¢ | — | $196 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win the Columbia at Harvard game; it matters because market prices aggregate public expectations about the matchup and respond to game-day developments.
Columbia and Harvard are Ivy League programs that meet on a schedule determined by their season fixtures; outcomes matter for conference standings and team momentum. Historical results, recent season form, and where the game is played (Harvard is the home team here) provide useful background for evaluating the matchup.
Market odds reflect the collective assessment of traders and will move as new information (injuries, lineup announcements, weather) becomes available. With two outcomes, the market is structured to resolve to which team wins, subject to the platform's official settlement rules.
The market close is listed as TBD for this event; most markets close at the official scheduled start time of the game or when the operator specifies—check the event page for the authoritative closing time.
The two outcomes correspond to which team wins the game (Columbia wins or Harvard wins); ties or other unusual results are handled according to the platform's official settlement rules.
They can affect the market very rapidly—traders incorporate injury reports, lineup news, and last-minute developments as soon as they are public, which can shift prices before the game starts.
Home-field advantage is a meaningful factor: familiar venue, local crowd support, and reduced travel fatigue can influence performance, though its impact varies by sport and by individual team circumstances.
Refer to official team websites, Ivy League or NCAA archives, and sports databases for past game results, season-by-season records, and historical context; those sources provide the head-to-head history that informs expectations for this event.