| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Xander Schauffele beats Ludvig Aberg | 31% | 7¢ | 30¢ | — | $19K | Trade → |
| Ludvig Aberg beats Xander Schauffele | 72% | 72¢ | 94¢ | — | $17K | Trade → |
This market asks which golfer, Aberg or Schauffele, will finish ahead of the other in the underlying tournament. It matters because it isolates the relative performance of two players and can be used to express a view on matchup-specific strengths.
Aberg and Schauffele are being pitted directly against one another in a head-to-head format that compares their finishing positions in a single tournament. Schauffele is an established, multiple-time PGA-level performer while Aberg is a rising competitor whose form and course fit can swing outcomes; course characteristics, recent form, and field strength all shape expectations. Head-to-head markets like this focus on relative result rather than absolute victory in the whole event.
Market prices represent the collective view of participants about which player is more likely to finish ahead; they update as new information (form, weather, pairings, withdrawals) becomes available and should be read as a consensus signal, not a certainty.
The market will resolve according to the platform's stated resolution rules tied to the underlying tournament—typically after official final results are posted for that event; check the market page for the exact trigger and any special provisions.
The winner is the player who finishes ahead in the specified tournament according to the event's official standings; the market description lists how ties, playoffs, or equal finishing positions are handled.
Resolution in the event of a withdrawal depends on the platform rules—options include awarding the opponent the matchup if they complete rounds, voiding the market, or following official tournament classifications—so consult the market's terms for exact handling.
Look at recent strokes-gained metrics (approach, putting, tee-to-green), past performance on similar courses, recent scoring trends, and head-to-head meetings in similar conditions to form a view on relative strengths.
Most head-to-head markets use the tournament's official final positions, which include playoff outcomes as recorded by the tournament; confirm the market's resolution rules to be sure whether playoffs are counted.