| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ursa | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Sangal | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market covers who will win Map 1 of the ESL Challenger League Europe Cup #2 2026 match between Ursa and Sangal. It matters because the first map often sets momentum for the series and is a focal point for short-term forecasting and hedging.
ESL Challenger League Europe Cup is a regional tournament in the 2026 CS:GO/Valorant competitive calendar (check the event page for the specific title), and matches are contested under ESL’s official rules and match reporting. Sangal is a known organization with a history in European/Tier-1–2 competition, while Ursa is an opponent whose recent form, roster moves, and map pool depth will shape expectations for this matchup.
Market odds represent the collective, updating views of participants about which team will win the first map; they change as new information arrives (lineups, vetoes, live performance). Interpret prices as a dynamic signal of market sentiment rather than a fixed prediction.
This market resolves on the official result of the first map played between Ursa and Sangal as recorded by the event organizer (ESL). If the map is completed (including overtime), the official match scoreboard determines the winner.
The market will typically close before the match or before the map veto/pick window; settlement occurs after ESL publishes the official Map 1 result. Exact close and settlement timestamps are posted on the market page—watch that page for updates.
Roster announcements can materially affect market expectations; verify the timing and official confirmation from ESL or team social accounts, then reassess map-specific impact (role replacements, IGL changes) because those often shift map win likelihoods more than generic results.
Yes—overtime is part of the official map result. The market is resolved using the official match outcome reported by ESL, which includes any overtime periods played on Map 1.
Primary sources are the ESL event page and the official match page, plus live match coverage (stream/VOD) and third-party stat sites that track vetoes and round-by-round logs. Use those sources for the most timely veto and map-pick information.