| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brooks Koepka beats Jake Knapp | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Jake Knapp beats Brooks Koepka | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market pits Brooks Koepka versus Knapp in a full-tournament head-to-head: the outcome is which named player finishes ahead over the entire event. It matters for bettors who want a simple, matchup-style way to express who they think will perform better across the tournament rather than betting on outright victory.
Head-to-head markets like this distill a multi-day golf tournament into a binary contest between two named competitors, incorporating factors such as course fit, recent form, and availability. Brooks Koepka is widely known as an established tour professional with experience in high-pressure events; Knapp is the opposing entrant for this matchup and may represent a different profile (younger, less experienced, or a specialist at certain courses). These markets update as entries, withdrawals, tee times, and conditions change.
Market odds reflect the collective expectations of participants about which player will finish better across the tournament and will change as new information arrives (injuries, weather, tee times, form). Always check the market’s specific settlement rules for handling ties, withdrawals, and missed cuts because those rules determine how this particular head-to-head is resolved.
The winner is the player who finishes ahead of the other in the official tournament standings after the event is completed, per the market’s settlement rules. Check whether the market treats ties, equal finishing positions, or identical scores as pushes, specific tiebreaks, or other outcomes.
Settlement depends on the market’s rules: many head-to-head markets treat a pre-tournament withdrawal as an automatic loss for that player (or void the contest), while in-tournament withdrawals typically result in the remaining player finishing ahead. Confirm the exact rule on the event page before trading.
Not automatically, but in practice a missed cut usually results in a worse final position than any player who makes the weekend. If both players miss the cut, settlement may depend on official finishing positions or specific market tie rules—refer to the market’s settlement documentation.
Past head-to-head results can provide context about how they match up, but small-sample head-to-head records are often less predictive than current form, course suitability, and recent results. Use head-to-head history as one input among others rather than a decisive factor.
Settlement timing follows the market’s published rules and the official tournament results: typically after the conclusion of the final round and once official scores are confirmed. If the market close is listed as TBD, check the event page for updates on closing and settlement timing.