| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Venezuela | 84% | 81¢ | 82¢ | — | $1K | Trade → |
| Netherlands | 19% | 16¢ | 19¢ | — | $576 | Trade → |
This market trades the outcome of the Netherlands vs Venezuela match, providing a way for traders to express expectations about which team will win. It matters because prices aggregate public information and can react quickly to news that affects match prospects.
Netherlands and Venezuela come from different confederations and do not meet frequently, so direct head-to-head history is limited; match context (friendly, tournament, qualifier) and recent form in each team’s competitions shape expectations. The two sides typically differ in style, squad depth and international experience, so situational factors such as travel, selection and scheduling often matter more than raw historical results.
Market prices represent the collective market view about which of the two listed outcomes will occur given available information. Track price changes around lineup announcements, injuries, weather or other news to see how the market updates its expectation.
This market is structured as a two-outcome contest representing each team winning the match: one outcome corresponds to a Netherlands win and the other to a Venezuela win. A draw is not listed as a separate outcome in this two-option setup.
The event shows a close time of TBD; on this platform markets typically close at or shortly before kickoff, but check the market page for the official and updated close time.
Lineup and injury updates for either team are high-impact information for this market: confirmed absences of key players or surprise starters tend to move market prices as traders revise expectations about relative chances.
Limited direct history reduces the weight of head-to-head statistics, but the market still captures relevant signals like recent form, squad quality and situational factors; traders often rely more on current-season indicators than rare past meetings.
Watch availability and minutes for leading attackers, the starting goalkeeper and any key defensive starters, along with in-game events such as red cards or early injuries; pre-match signals like tactical announcements, weather and late absences also frequently drive market movement.