| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nebraska | 50% | 49¢ | 50¢ | — | $165K | Trade → |
| UCLA | 51% | 50¢ | 51¢ | — | $90K | Trade → |
This KALSHI market asks which team will win the Nebraska at UCLA game; it matters because market prices aggregate bettors' information and reaction to game-day developments. Traders use it to express and test expectations about the matchup.
Nebraska and UCLA are NCAA Division I programs meeting in an interconference matchup where home-field (UCLA) and travel often matter. Historical head-to-heads, recent coaching moves, and roster turnover can shape pregame expectations, while injuries and late depth-chart news commonly shift sentiment. The market is binary—one outcome for a Nebraska win, one for a UCLA win—and will resolve to the official game result.
Market prices reflect the collective view of participants and change as new information arrives; they should be read as a consensus signal rather than a certainty. Because this market has two outcomes, movement toward one side indicates growing market conviction that that team will finish the game as the official winner.
Each outcome corresponds to the official final-game result: one outcome settles if Nebraska is the official winner, the other if UCLA is the official winner, as recorded by the sport’s governing body and the official box score.
The market close time is listed as TBD by KALSHI; the platform will announce a definitive close before the event. The market resolves after the game is completed and the official final result is posted, subject to KALSHI’s resolution procedures.
Settlement in those scenarios follows KALSHI’s event rules: markets are typically voided or held pending official rescheduling if the game is postponed or resumed within an acceptable window, and may be declared no-contest if the game is canceled without a result—check the platform’s event rules for the final policy.
Late-breaking items such as the starter at quarterback, injury reports on key skill players or defenders, surprise inactive players, major coaching announcements, and impactful weather or travel disruptions typically move prices the most for this matchup.
Trade volume is a measure of liquidity and information flow: $255,154 indicates a meaningful amount of money has been traded, which generally leads to tighter pricing and quicker incorporation of new information, but volume does not guarantee accuracy and prices can still shift with late news.