| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rhode Island | 55% | 50¢ | 55¢ | — | $1K | Trade → |
| George Mason | 48% | 44¢ | 49¢ | — | $137 | Trade → |
This prediction market asks which team will win the college basketball game between George Mason (visiting) and Rhode Island (home). It matters because market prices aggregate bettors' expectations about team strength, injuries, and other game-day information.
George Mason and Rhode Island are Division I programs that have met in conference and non-conference play; matchups between them are influenced by roster construction and coaching styles rather than one-sided historical dominance. Rhode Island will be the home team for this event, which typically affects travel logistics and crowd factors. Betting markets for single games like this reflect short-term signals such as recent form, injuries, and matchup advantages.
In this context, market odds are a dynamic summary of traders' views and new information (roster news, injuries, starting lineups, etc.). Because prices move as news and money flow in, they should be read as the market's current consensus rather than a fixed prediction.
This market offers two mutually exclusive outcomes corresponding to the final result: a George Mason win or a Rhode Island win; settlement follows the official game result as determined by the platform.
Trading typically closes at the official scheduled start time of the game, but the exact close time is set by the platform and may be updated if the game start changes—check the KALSHI event page for the final close time.
Home-court matters: account for travel fatigue for the visitor, crowd effects, and both teams' recent home/away performance when evaluating likely outcomes.
Late injury or lineup news can shift market prices quickly as traders update expectations; lower-volume markets may show larger price swings to the same news, so monitor official injury reports and coach announcements closely.
Total volume is a measure of liquidity and interest: relatively low volume suggests fewer participants and greater sensitivity to single trades, so prices may be more volatile and less stable than high-volume markets.