| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grand Canyon | 42% | 29¢ | 40¢ | — | $15 | Trade → |
| Arizona | 0% | 58¢ | 72¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win the matchup between Grand Canyon and Arizona; it matters to fans and traders as a way to aggregate expectations about the game's outcome.
Both teams are NCAA Division I programs with differing profiles: Arizona is traditionally a high-profile program with frequent top recruits, while Grand Canyon is an emerging program that has produced occasional upsets and competitive performances. Match context (nonconference game, conference play, or tournament setting), venue, and timing in the season all shape how evenly matched the teams are and how seriously each team treats the contest.
Market prices represent the collective assessment of traders and move as new information arrives (injuries, starting lineups, travel, etc.). Because this market has low traded volume, prices may be more volatile and less stable until more bets are placed.
The event page lists the close time as TBD; typically the market will close before the game tip-off or at a platform-specified time, so check the KALSHI market page for the final close time.
This market has two outcomes: a Grand Canyon win outcome and an Arizona win outcome; one resolves as the winning team at the game's official end according to the platform’s resolution rules.
Material injury or lineup news typically causes rapid price movement as traders update their assessments; late-breaking news near tip-off can especially move the market because it directly alters expected team strength.
Yes — home-court advantage can materially affect game outcomes; the event listing on KALSHI should indicate the venue or which team is hosting, and you should confirm location before trading.
Low traded volume means limited liquidity and greater sensitivity to individual bets, so prices may be noisy and subject to large swings; treat early prices as preliminary sentiment rather than stable forecasts until volume increases.