| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Idaho | 55% | 53¢ | 55¢ | — | $30K | Trade → |
| Eastern Washington | 48% | 47¢ | 48¢ | — | $14K | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win the Idaho at Eastern Washington matchup and matters for fans and bettors tracking team form, injuries, and matchup edge. Outcome information can inform expectations about each program’s short-term performance.
Idaho and Eastern Washington are collegiate programs that have met regularly in regional conference play; Eastern Washington has been a strong program in recent seasons while Idaho has had periods of rebuilding and transition. Game results are influenced by roster turnover, coaching changes, and the timing within the season (early nonconference games versus late conference contests).
Market prices summarize how traders collectively view the likely winner at a given moment; they move as new information (injuries, weather, lineup changes) arrives. With low trading volume, prices may be less stable and reflect fewer participants rather than broad consensus.
The market closing time is listed as TBD; check the market page for the official close time and any updates as the event date approaches.
This market lists two outcomes corresponding to the two possible game winners (Idaho or Eastern Washington); the market resolves to the listed winner after official game results are confirmed.
Zero or very low volume indicates limited liquidity and participation, so quoted prices may change sharply when trades occur and may not reflect broad consensus; monitor trade activity and news before relying on a price.
Watch the projected starting quarterbacks, primary running backs and receivers, and any announced defensive leaders; also monitor official injury reports and late-game status updates from each program.
Historical results can show matchup tendencies (which team’s style has had the upper hand), but roster turnover and coaching changes mean recent seasons and current rosters are more informative than distant history.