| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gerwyn Price | 73% | 59¢ | 68¢ | — | $38 | Trade → |
| Stephen Bunting | 44% | 30¢ | 39¢ | — | $23 | Trade → |
This market covers the head-to-head match between Gerwyn Price and Stephen Bunting and matters because it reflects bettors' expectations about which player will win. The market has had $61 in total volume traded, indicating relatively low liquidity and limited trading consensus.
Gerwyn Price and Stephen Bunting are established professional darts players with differing styles and track records; Price is known for his power scoring while Bunting is known for solid checkout play. Their past meetings, current season form, and the specific tournament context (stage, prize, and format) provide important background for evaluating this matchup. Because this market closes TBD, timing of information releases (injury news, practice reports, scheduling) can change expectations quickly.
Market odds are an aggregated snapshot of trader sentiment about which player will win and update as new information arrives; they should be treated as one input alongside match statistics and expert analysis. Low trading volume can mean prices are more sensitive to individual trades and less stable as a consensus signal.
The market closing time is listed as TBD; typically these markets close at or shortly before the scheduled match start, so check the platform for live updates and final close times.
This head-to-head market settles on which player wins the match: either Gerwyn Price wins or Stephen Bunting wins; draws are not a settlement option in standard match markets.
Look at recent three-dart averages, checkout percentages (especially on doubles), number of 180s, and leg-by-leg consistency from recent matches, plus any direct matchup stats between Price and Bunting.
Shorter formats (fewer legs/sets) increase variance and the chance of an upset because a small string of strong or weak legs has greater impact, while longer formats tend to let the better player’s advantage assert itself over time.
Items that can move the market include confirmed injuries or withdrawals, last-minute travel or scheduling disruptions, official practice/performance reports, and announcements about lineup or format changes for the match.