| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Southern Illinois | 33% | 34¢ | 69¢ | — | $6 | Trade → |
| Indiana St. | 0% | 27¢ | 65¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market covers the outcome of the Indiana St. at Southern Illinois game and aggregates trader expectations about which team will win. It matters because market prices reflect real‑time reactions to roster news, injuries, and other game‑specific information.
Indiana State (Sycamores) and Southern Illinois (Salukis) are programs that often meet in the same conference and have a history of competitive matchups; past meetings, coaching styles, and home‑court environment all shape pregame expectations. Seasonal form, roster turnover, and travel or scheduling quirks can change the balance between the teams in any given meeting.
In this context, prediction market odds reflect the consensus view of traders about the likely winner and move as new information arrives; they are not guarantees but a continuously updating summary of expectations.
The event page shows the close as TBD; on most platforms markets close at the scheduled game start or when an official start time is posted. Check the platform for updates and expect final closure at or right before tip‑off once the game time is confirmed.
This two‑outcome market resolves on which team wins the game — Indiana St. or Southern Illinois — subject to the platform’s settlement rules (for example, how overtime is handled). Review the market’s rule text on the platform for any tie, cancellation, or postponement language.
Announcements about starters, key role players, or late‑breaking injuries typically move prices quickly; more impactful absences (primary scorers or defensive anchors) tend to cause larger shifts, especially as the game approaches and the market is thinner.
Head‑to‑head history provides context — such as matchup problems or psychological edges — but current rosters, coaching, and form usually matter more for a single game. Traders often weight recent meetings more heavily than distant history.
Low volume means limited liquidity: individual trades can move prices substantially, and quoted odds may not reflect wide public consensus. Monitor volume and timing of trades; increased activity closer to game time typically produces more informative prices.