| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Federico Agustin Gomez | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Clement Tabur | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which fighter will win the scheduled bout between Gomez and Tabur; it matters because it aggregates public expectations about the matchup and reacts to pre-fight developments. Traders use it to express views on the likely winner and to hedge or speculate on event risk.
Gomez vs Tabur pits two fighters with distinct records, styles, and career trajectories against each other; the matchup may carry implications for divisional rankings, promotional momentum, or future bookings for the winner. Pre-fight factors such as official fight announcement, promotional build-up, medical clearances, and any last-minute changes shape both public perception and the available information traders use.
Market prices reflect the collective assessment of who will win given public information and will move as new facts arrive (injuries, weigh-ins, camp reports, etc.). Prices are not a fixed prediction; treat them as a dynamic snapshot that incorporates ongoing news and sentiment.
The market close time is listed on the event page as TBD; in practice markets commonly close shortly before official fight time or when an official change (cancellation, competitor replacement) is announced, so expect trading to pause or close around major pre-fight milestones.
This market offers two outcomes corresponding to each fighter: a Gomez win or a Tabur win; settlement follows the officially declared winner for the bout per the event's governing authority and the market's published rules.
Key movers include weight-miss reports, medically confirmed injuries, positive drug-test news, announced corner or trainer changes, late replacement sparring footage, and any formal change to the fight card or bout order.
The market settles to the officially recorded bout result: a knockout, technical stoppage, judges' decision, or disqualification that names a winner will settle to that winner; no-contests or other atypical outcomes are resolved according to the market's published settlement policy.
If the bout is postponed the market may remain open until a new date is set or trading may be paused; if the fight is canceled or a competitor withdraws without an approved replacement, the market will be resolved according to the event and market rules, which commonly include voiding or refunding positions or creating a revised market if a substitute is named.