| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fairfield | 69% | 65¢ | 69¢ | — | $88 | Trade → |
| Manhattan | 33% | 31¢ | 35¢ | — | $80 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win the Manhattan at Fairfield game. It matters because it aggregates public expectations about the game's outcome and can move as new information (injuries, lineup changes, tip time) becomes available.
Manhattan and Fairfield are mid‑major college basketball programs that frequently meet in conference play; their matchups can affect seeding, postseason chances, and local bragging rights. Historical results, coaching continuity, and typical styles of play — for example emphasis on guard play or interior defense — help shape how observers evaluate the matchup.
Market prices reflect the balance of money and information placed by participants and update as new facts arrive; they are not guarantees of outcomes but a real‑time summary of sentiment and information on this specific game.
The market resolves when the official result of the scheduled game is publicly reported by the relevant league or governing body; the side corresponding to the official final-game winner is paid out.
Yes — if the game goes to overtime, the official final result after any overtime periods determines which outcome wins.
If the scheduled contest is not completed as a regulation game, the platform will follow its published resolution rules, which typically rely on the league’s classification (postponed, canceled, rescheduled) and may result in voiding or administrative settlement; check the market’s rules page for the specific tie‑breaking policy.
They can move the market immediately — bettors and traders react rapidly to credible reports about starters, suspensions, or injuries, so expect prices to update as new verified information appears prior to tip‑off.
Early foul trouble to a key player, an unexpected ejection, a major injury, or a decisive halftime report (e.g., coach decisions, visible injuries) tend to cause the fastest market shifts because they materially change expected win likelihoods.