| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Joaquin Niemann beats Sergio Garcia | 22% | 0¢ | 1¢ | — | $1K | Trade → |
| Sergio Garcia beats Joaquin Niemann | 99% | 99¢ | 100¢ | — | $556 | Trade → |
This market is a head-to-head matchup between Niemann and Garcia, letting traders take positions on which named player will outperform the other in the specified contest. It matters because head-to-head markets concentrate outcome risk into a simple comparison, making them useful for bettors who want to express a view on relative performance rather than an outright win.
Niemann and Garcia are established professional competitors with differing career trajectories and strengths; Niemann is known for recent form and long driving ability, while Garcia brings experience and course management from a long professional career. Head-to-head markets like this are typically tied to a particular tournament, round, or measurable outcome (for example, finishing position) and resolve according to the market’s settlement rules and the event’s official results.
Prediction market odds reflect the market’s collective view of which player will finish ahead under the market’s stated resolution criteria; they are not guarantees. Always check the event description and settlement rules to understand exactly what result will trigger resolution.
The winner is determined by the market’s published settlement criteria — typically which named player finishes ahead according to the official results of the specified competition. Consult the market description for the exact resolution rule (e.g., tournament finish, single round, or other metric).
Close and settlement times are listed on the market page; the close is currently TBD. The market normally closes before the relevant play begins and settles after the event’s official results are published, per the platform’s settlement policy.
Resolution in cases of withdrawal or disqualification follows the market’s rules — some markets treat a withdrawal as an automatic loss, others void or settle based on available results. Check the event’s specific terms for the platform’s policy on retirements, no-shows, and DQs.
Past head-to-head results provide context but are only one of several inputs; form, course fit, and current physical condition often matter more for a single contest. Use historical records as background rather than a definitive guide.
Settlement will rely on the official result feeds named in the market rules — typically the tournament’s official leaderboard or the governing body’s published results. The market description specifies the authoritative source used for resolution.