| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dean Burmester beats Joaquin Niemann | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Joaquin Niemann beats Dean Burmester | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which golfer—Niemann or Burmester—will finish ahead over the full tournament. It matters because it isolates comparative performance between two players across all rounds, letting traders express views on relative form, course fit, and conditions.
Both names refer to individual professional golfers; this head-to-head covers the entire tournament leaderboard rather than a single hole or match-play session. Full-tournament head-to-heads are resolved using official tournament scores and are sensitive to factors like making the cut, withdrawals, and playoff outcomes.
Market quotes reflect the aggregate of participant expectations about which player will finish with the better official tournament score and will move as new information (form, tee times, weather, withdrawals) becomes available.
The winner is the player who records the better official tournament score as published by the tournament organizer for the full event. The event page and official rules specify how the market is resolved in cases such as ties or disqualifications.
Close time is listed as TBD for this event. Head-to-head markets typically close before the tournament’s first round or first tee time, but you should consult the event page for the official closing timestamp.
Tie resolution follows the platform’s event rules: some markets treat exact ties as a separate resolution (refunds or split outcomes), while others follow tournament tiebreak procedures. Check the event page or rulebook for this market’s specific tie policy.
Resolution in withdrawal or DNS/DQ scenarios is determined by the event’s rules. Common approaches include awarding the market to the player who completed the tournament, voiding the market if both fail to complete, or following tournament-specific policies—confirm via the event page.
Use official tour websites, tournament leaderboards, sports-data providers, and match logs to compare past finishes, strokes-gained metrics, and direct matchups. News outlets and injury reports can also provide timely context ahead of the event.