| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Youngstown St. | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Marshall | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This prediction market lets traders express views on the outcome of the Marshall at Youngstown St. game. It matters because market prices aggregate public information about team form, injuries, and other game-day factors.
Marshall and Youngstown State are regional college football programs that sometimes meet in nonconference matchups; Marshall is typically an FBS program and Youngstown State an FCS program, which affects roster depth and resources. Historical context: such matchups are often used by the higher-division team to tune up their season, but upsets and competitive games do occur, so game-day information matters.
Market prices are a real-time consensus of trader expectations and move as new information arrives (injuries, weather, depth charts, odds released by sportsbooks). Use them as a snapshot of collective sentiment rather than a precise forecast.
The market close time is set by the platform and currently listed as TBD; typically these markets close at or just before kickoff, but you should check the event page for the official close time and any last-minute changes.
This event has two outcomes and will resolve according to the official game result reported by the sport’s governing body or the market operator; consult the market rules for specifics on ties, overtime, and the official source used for resolution.
A reported injury to a key player typically causes rapid price movement as traders update expectations; such moves reflect new information and how traders believe the absence will change win probability and game dynamics.
Home-field can matter through crowd influence, reduced travel fatigue, and familiarity with the field and local weather; its impact depends on the teams’ travel distance, crowd size, and how evenly matched the teams are on paper.
When an FBS program faces an FCS program, the FBS team often has advantages in depth, recruiting, and budgeting, but FCS teams can win in motivated or well-coached performances; market pricing typically reflects those structural differences while remaining sensitive to matchup-specific factors.