| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Over 156.5 points scored | 47% | 46¢ | 49¢ | — | $2K | Trade → |
| Over 153.5 points scored | 56% | 54¢ | 56¢ | — | $154 | Trade → |
| Over 150.5 points scored | 64% | 59¢ | 65¢ | — | $60 | Trade → |
| Over 159.5 points scored | 42% | 37¢ | 43¢ | — | $13 | Trade → |
| Over 144.5 points scored | 77% | 71¢ | 77¢ | — | $10 | Trade → |
| Over 171.5 points scored | 22% | 14¢ | 22¢ | — | $5 | Trade → |
| Over 162.5 points scored | 0% | 31¢ | 35¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Over 147.5 points scored | 0% | 64¢ | 70¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Over 141.5 points scored | 0% | 75¢ | 83¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Over 168.5 points scored | 0% | 18¢ | 24¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Over 165.5 points scored | 0% | 24¢ | 30¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks how many total points will be scored in the LSU vs. Auburn game, letting traders take positions on different combined-score outcomes. It matters because totals reflect expectations about offense, defense, pace, and game script for this specific matchup.
LSU and Auburn are SEC programs whose matchups can swing between high-scoring shootouts and low-scoring, defensive slugfests depending on personnel and coaching game plans. Historical head-to-head results provide context but the market will primarily move on current-season form, injuries, weather, and late-breaking news about starters or play-calling.
Each quoted outcome represents the market’s consensus view for that specific combined-score outcome or range; prices adjust as bettors incorporate new information. Treat prices as dynamic signals of how the field values different scoring scenarios rather than fixed predictions.
It refers to the combined final score of LSU and Auburn as defined by the market’s rules on KALSHI; check the market description there to confirm whether overtime is included or if any special tie rules apply.
Each outcome corresponds to a specific total-point value or a point-range bucket shown on the market page; read the outcome labels to see the exact boundaries, then use those labels with current team information to decide which outcomes align with your scoring expectation.
A starter-down announcement typically shifts expectations for scoring and pace—markets often move quickly as traders price in reduced passing efficiency, higher interception/fumble risk, or a more conservative game plan depending on the backup’s profile.
Head-to-head history is useful for context (e.g., tendencies in rivalry games), but predictive value is limited unless rosters, coordinators, and play styles are similar; treat historical scores as one input alongside current-season metrics and injuries.
The listed close is TBD, so check the KALSHI market page for the official trading cutoff; generally, liquidity and information flow change rapidly approaching kickoff, so decide whether you want exposure to late-breaking news or prefer to trade earlier.