| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monmouth | 60% | 59¢ | 60¢ | — | $400 | Trade → |
| Drexel | 43% | 42¢ | 43¢ | — | $359 | Trade → |
This market reflects the expected outcome of the Drexel at Monmouth college basketball game and matters because it aggregates public and professional information into a single, tradable price that moves as new information arrives.
Drexel and Monmouth are NCAA Division I programs; matchups between similarly sized programs often hinge on tempo, shooting accuracy, and depth rather than superstar talent. Seasonal context — roster turnover, midweek vs. weekend scheduling, and tournament implications — can all change the relative strengths of each team from game to game.
Market prices represent the collective judgment of traders given the available information and update as lineups, injuries, and other news arrive. Treat the market price as a consensus signal, not a certainty; individual outcomes can and do differ from market expectations.
The event page currently lists the market close as TBD; platforms typically close markets before official tipoff but check the market page for the platform's announced close time in case of updates or schedule changes.
Monitor projected starters and primary ball-handlers, leading scorers, and starting bigs for both teams—any announcement about those players' availability, injury status, or unexpected absences is most likely to move the market.
Late injuries or lineup changes typically move the market quickly because they change matchup quality, minutes distribution, and game strategy; the size of the move depends on the injured player’s role and the availability of a comparable replacement.
Yes—home-court factors such as travel fatigue for Drexel, crowd impact, and court familiarity for Monmouth are priced in by traders, though the magnitude varies by matchup and recent home/road performance trends.
Head-to-head history can provide context but is often less informative than current-season form because rosters and coaching staffs change; prioritize recent performance, injuries, and matchup-specific stats over long-ago results.