| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mexico | 90% | 87¢ | 90¢ | — | $1K | Trade → |
| Great Britain | 16% | 10¢ | 13¢ | — | $300 | Trade → |
This market is a binary wager on the outcome of the Mexico vs Great Britain sports match and matters because it aggregates public expectations about which side will prevail. It is useful for tracking how new information—lineups, injuries, or tournament context—changes perceived chances in real time.
Mexico and Great Britain meet under whatever competition rules apply for this fixture; Great Britain as a combined team appears mainly in multi-sport events (for example the Olympics), while constituent UK nations more commonly compete separately. Historical head-to-head data may be limited depending on the sport and competition, so contextual details such as tournament stage, squad composition, and recent form are important to assess.
Prediction market prices reflect the consensus view of traders and update as news arrives; use them as a dynamic signal rather than a definitive forecast. Also check the market page for resolution rules and any event-specific conventions (e.g., whether draws, extra time, or penalties are handled specially).
The market’s two outcomes correspond to the two mutually exclusive results defined by the market creator (typically one outcome for Mexico to win and one for Great Britain to win). Consult the market description for any special handling of draws, extra time, or penalty shootouts.
Resolution will follow the official result reported by the competition organizer listed on the market page. The market description will state how ties, extra time, or penalties are treated and which official source is used for validation.
Watch starting XI releases, injury updates, suspension news, late travel or weather advisories, and coach press-conference comments about tactics or player availability—each can materially shift trader expectations.
Because Great Britain fields combined teams only in certain competitions, direct historical meetings may be few; relevant context includes prior encounters at similar tournaments, results against comparable opposition, and how Mexico fared versus the constituent UK nations (England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland) when direct GB data is sparse.
Total volume indicates how much money has changed hands and is a proxy for liquidity and how much information the market has already absorbed; modest volume implies prices may be more sensitive to individual trades or news, while rising volume usually signals increased market attention and smoother trading.