| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| VCU | 86% | 85¢ | 86¢ | — | $29K | Trade → |
| George Mason | 15% | 14¢ | 15¢ | — | $17K | Trade → |
This prediction market asks which team will win the George Mason at VCU game; it matters because it aggregates bettors' expectations about the game's outcome and reacts to news such as injuries and lineup changes.
George Mason and VCU are NCAA Division I programs whose matchups can carry conference and tournament implications depending on timing in the season. VCU typically benefits from a strong home-court environment, while George Mason has shown competitiveness in recent years; roster turnover, injuries, and coaching matchups are often decisive. Markets for this game let participants trade on the outcome ahead of closure or tip-off.
Market prices reflect the collective assessment of which team is more likely to win given available information; price moves usually follow new information (injury reports, starting lineups, official announcements) and shifts in trader sentiment.
This market trades two mutually exclusive outcomes corresponding to the game winner: one outcome pays if George Mason wins and the other pays if VCU wins; only the outcome that actually occurs is paid.
The market's closing time is listed as TBD; the platform will publish the official close (often at or shortly before tip-off) and may update the page or send notifications when a firm closing time is set.
Home-court can be significant: familiarity with the arena, fan energy, and reduced travel fatigue typically favor the home team, but its impact should be weighed against roster quality, recent form, and matchup specifics.
Key items include official injury and availability reports, confirmed starting lineups, coach pregame announcements, and any disciplinary news; those items frequently trigger sharp price movements as traders update positions.
Historical results provide context about matchup tendencies, but give greater weight to recent trends, current-season performance, and roster continuity—past games matter less if there have been major lineup or coaching changes since those meetings.