| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MTL Canadiens | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| CBJ Blue Jackets | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which side will prevail in the Columbus at Montreal matchup; it aggregates trader expectations about the game's outcome and can surface new information faster than other sources. It matters because shifts in prices reflect changing assessments about factors like lineups, injuries, and game-day conditions.
Columbus is the designated away team and Montreal the home team for this fixture; both travel, scheduling, and rink/stadium environment can influence the contest. Historical matchups between the two clubs provide context but current-season form, roster status, and coaching decisions typically drive short-term expectations. The market currently shows no traded volume and the official close time is listed as TBD on the event page.
Market prices represent the collective, up‑to‑date view of traders about which outcome is more likely given available information; they are signals, not guarantees. Rapid price moves often reflect new, event‑specific information such as lineup announcements or in‑game developments.
The market's official close time is listed as TBD on the event page; check the market details for an updated close time before placing trades. If a close time is announced it will determine the last moment new orders can be placed.
Resolution rules vary by market; consult the specific contract terms on the event page to see whether the outcome counts regulation only or includes overtime/shootout results — the contract text is authoritative.
Last‑minute lineup changes are often material information that traders incorporate quickly; monitor official team announcements and trusted beat reports, since such changes can shift expected match dynamics and therefore market prices.
Head‑to‑head history provides context and can reveal matchup tendencies, but markets tend to weight current factors (injuries, form, starting personnel, schedule) more heavily for a single game outcome.
Early scoring events, an opponent’s major injury or ejection, a starting goalie being pulled, and momentum shifts from key special‑teams situations (penalties/set pieces) are the types of developments that typically move prices during the game.