| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| New York M | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Houston | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win Game 2 of the New York M vs Houston series. It matters because Game 2 can shift momentum in a short series and affects subsequent matchups and strategy.
Game 2 follows Game 1 and typically reflects adjustments made after the opening contest, including lineup tweaks and pitching changes. Historical series dynamics — travel schedule, rotation order, and how teams respond to early results — often influence Game 2 outcomes. The market aggregates participant views on these and other real-time factors.
Market odds represent traders' aggregate assessment of the likely winner and will move as new information becomes available (injuries, lineups, weather, etc.). They are a real-time signal of changing expectations, not a guarantee of any single result.
TBD means the platform has not yet published the market's official close time; typically markets close shortly before game start or when settlement criteria are set. Plan to monitor the platform for the announced close and avoid waiting until the last minute if you want to act on pregame information.
It indicates a binary market: one outcome corresponds to a New York M win in Game 2 and the other to a Houston win. The market is settled based on the official final result for this specific game, with any exceptional cases handled according to the platform's event rules.
Announcements about the starting pitcher (or primary starter equivalent), last-minute lineup changes to key offensive players, or any noted absences of impact players typically have the biggest effect because they materially change matchups and in-game strategy.
Game 1 results can influence momentum and managerial decisions—teams may alter pitching plans, lineups, or strategy based on what worked or failed. However, Game 2 also depends on scheduled matchups and rest considerations, so treat Game 1 as informative but not determinative.
Settlement typically follows the league's official game completion rules and the platform's event policy; if the official result stands after a delay or extra innings, the market is settled on that result. For unusual cases (cancellations, suspensions), consult the platform's published settlement rules for this event.