| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adam Scott beats Russell Henley | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Russell Henley beats Adam Scott | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which named competitor — Scott or Henley — will win their head-to-head matchup. It matters because head-to-head markets let traders express a view on relative performance between two specific competitors rather than on broader fields.
The Head-to-Head Matchup: Scott vs Henley market resolves to the officially recorded winner of the scheduled contest between these two participants. Relevant background includes each competitor's recent form, the event context (round, tournament importance), and any prior meetings between them — all of which can shift expectations ahead of the contest.
Market prices aggregate traders' expectations about who will win and will move as new information arrives. Treat price moves as signals about changing information (injuries, lineups, conditions), not as precise forecasts of exact outcomes or margins.
This market settles on which named competitor — Scott or Henley — is officially recorded as the winner by the event organizer. The official result used for settlement is the one published by the governing body or event officials.
Resolution follows the platform's stated rules: a postponed match may keep the market open until the contest takes place, while a canceled or declared no-contest will typically be handled according to the exchange's cancellation/refund policy. Check the specific market page and platform rules for final determination.
Short-term movements usually reflect fresh information such as late injury reports, official starting lists, or new reporting on conditions. Use movements as prompts to verify the underlying news rather than as standalone evidence.
Head-to-head history is available from sport-specific databases, league/association records, and match archives; news outlets and official event pages also summarize past meetings. Historical results can inform expectations about matchup dynamics but do not determine the market outcome by themselves.
Key movers include official injury or withdrawal announcements, published starting lineups or pairings, significant weather or venue changes, disciplinary rulings, and high-profile media reports about either competitor.