| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fight goes the distance | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the scheduled bout between Nathaniel Wood and Losene Keita will go the distance (reach the end of the scheduled rounds and be decided by the judges). It matters because the outcome type (finish vs. decision) is driven by fighter styles and strategy, and is a common proposition for bettors and analysts.
The event pairs two professional mixed-martial-arts fighters whose matchup dynamics — striking power, grappling threat, cardio, and tactical approach — determine how likely the fight is to end early. Historically, similar matchups have resolved either by stoppage (KO/TKO/submission) or by decision depending on how each athlete executes their gameplan and handles fight-time variables like pace and clinch exchanges.
Prediction market odds aggregate participants' beliefs about whether the fight will go the distance; changes in odds reflect new information (e.g., injuries, weight issues, public betting) and can be read as market sentiment about the likelihood of a decision versus a stoppage.
It means the fight completes all scheduled rounds and is decided by the judges' scorecards rather than ending earlier by knockout, technical knockout, submission, disqualification, or any referee/doctor stoppage.
Resolution follows the official result recorded by the event’s commission/promoter: the market settles after the bout is declared a decision (if it goes the distance) or a finish. Specific settlement timing and procedures are determined by the exchange’s rules.
Outcome handling depends on the market’s rulebook; commonly, a no-contest or overturned result can lead to voiding/settling based on the exchange’s stated policies. Check the event-specific settlement rules on the platform for definitive procedures.
Look at each fighter’s recent finishes vs. decisions, takedown accuracy and defense, significant strikes absorbed, late-round performance, and any recent changes in training camp, injuries, or weight-cut issues.
Such developments can materially change expectations: injuries or poor weight cuts often reduce cardio and increase stoppage risk, while short-notice replacements can alter stylistic matchups. Markets typically react quickly to verified reports, so watch official confirmations.