| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Harvard | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| California Baptist | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market offers a way to trade on which team wins the Harvard vs California Baptist matchup; it matters for fans and traders seeking a market-based view of the game outcome.
Harvard (an Ivy League program) and California Baptist (a Division I program that transitioned to D-I in recent years) come from different conferences and competitive contexts, so games between them can highlight contrasts in style, roster construction, and scheduling. Because they do not share a conference, matchups are often nonconference contests scheduled for early season or special events and may have limited direct head-to-head history.
Market prices reflect the aggregated expectations of participants and move as new information (rosters, injuries, venue, start times) becomes available; treat them as one input alongside scouting, injuries, and matchup analysis when forming your view.
The close time is set by the exchange and currently marked TBD; check the event page on the platform for the official published start time and any updates from the organizer or athletic departments.
Resolution follows the exchange's event rules: markets are typically voided or refunded if the game is not played within the platform's defined window, while a completed contest is settled to the official final result—consult the event rules on the trading platform for specifics.
Such announcements are material and often move market prices quickly; incorporate official injury reports and starting lineups into your analysis, and note that trades executed before the announcement remain at the price you received.
Home‑court advantage generally matters—crowd, travel fatigue, and familiarity with the court can influence outcomes—so confirm the venue listed on the event page or the schools' schedules to know whether the game is at Harvard, California Baptist, or a neutral site.
Look at each program's recent records, strength of schedule, conference competition, and any past matchups between the teams (if any). Because they often come from different conferences, comparing performance versus common opponents and recent nonconference results can provide useful context.