| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ipek Oz | 18% | 15¢ | 18¢ | — | $368 | Trade → |
| Veronika Erjavec | 85% | 82¢ | 85¢ | — | $1 | Trade → |
This market lets traders take positions on which competitor—Erjavec or Oz—will win a specified sporting contest. It matters because market prices reflect aggregated expectations and react quickly to new information about the matchup.
This is a head-to-head sporting matchup; relevant background includes each athlete’s recent form, level of competition, rankings, and any prior meetings between them. Venue, competition rules (for example duration, rounds, or surface), and timing of the event also shape the competitive context.
Market prices are a snapshot of collective beliefs about the likely outcome and will change as news, injuries, or other information arrives; in low-volume markets those prices can move more on individual trades, so treat them as one input among other sources.
This is a two-outcome market: one outcome is Erjavec winning and the other is Oz winning. The contract text on the market page specifies whether draws, disqualifications, or walkovers are treated as resolution events.
The market close is listed as TBD; trades will stop at the platform-specified close time once it is set. Check the market page for the official close time and any last-trade cutoffs announced by the operator.
Settlement rules vary by platform; some markets are voided and funds refunded if the contest is canceled, others resolve based on rescheduled outcomes. Review the market’s settlement rules and the operator’s policy for postponed or canceled events.
The market’s contract specifies the authoritative source(s)—for example, the event organizer, an official scoreboard, or a designated news outlet. Consult the market description for the named sources used for final resolution.
Relatively low total volume suggests limited liquidity; prices may move sharply on small trades and new information. Use caution when inferring wide consensus from a shallow market and combine market signals with independent information about the competitors.