| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brunno Ferreira to win in Round 1 | 18% | 10¢ | 17¢ | — | $412 | Trade → |
| Gregory Rodrigues to win in Round 3 | 11% | 2¢ | 7¢ | — | $285 | Trade → |
| Gregory Rodrigues to win in Round 2 | 19% | 5¢ | 18¢ | — | $231 | Trade → |
| Brunno Ferreira to win in Round 2 | 12% | 4¢ | 9¢ | — | $156 | Trade → |
| Gregory Rodrigues to win in Round 1 | 28% | 16¢ | 27¢ | — | $151 | Trade → |
| Brunno Ferreira to win in Round 3 | 0% | 8¢ | 10¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market lets traders speculate on which round Gregory Rodrigues or Brunno Ferreira will win the fight. It matters because round-based markets highlight expectations about how the matchup will unfold across early, middle, and late phases of the bout.
Both Gregory Rodrigues and Brunno Ferreira are professional mixed-martial-arts competitors with distinct skill sets and histories of both finishes and decisions; their past performances, recent activity, and preparation inform how observers expect the fight to progress. Historical stylistic matchups between similar fighters (strikers vs. grapplers, aggressive starters vs. patient pace-setters) provide context for which rounds are more likely to produce a finish. Market pricing will reflect collective judgments about those contextual factors and any late developments in camps or medical status.
In this context, market odds indicate the collective expectation about when—and by whom—the fight will end, not a guaranteed outcome; they move as new information arrives. Treat odds as a real-time signal of consensus and changing news rather than a fixed prediction.
It asks participants to predict in which round the fight will end and which fighter will record the victory; if the fight goes the distance, the market’s designated 'decision' outcome applies.
The market is resolved using the official result posted by the event’s athletic commission or promotion; if the bout is declared a draw, no-contest, or overturned, settlement follows the platform’s published resolution rules.
Attributes include finishing ability (knockout power or submission skill), defensive acumen, stamina across rounds, and how well each fighter executes their game plan under pressure.
Late changes typically shift expectations about the bout’s tempo and finishing potential; markets often react quickly, but always confirm official medical or commission reports since those determine settlement.
A decision outcome is treated as a distinct resolution category indicating the fight went the scheduled distance; the specific type of decision (unanimous, split) usually does not change which round-based outcome wins, though platform rules cover edge cases.