| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| New York Y | 53% | 49¢ | 53¢ | — | $3K | Trade → |
| Washington | 50% | 48¢ | 50¢ | — | $854 | Trade → |
This market lets traders take positions on which team will win the head‑to‑head matchup between New York Y and Washington. It matters because market prices aggregate public expectations about the game's outcome and respond quickly to news that affects either team.
This is a single-game sports market for a matchup between two clubs with their own recent form, roster situations, and historical head‑to‑head context. Depending on the timing within the season, the game can carry different stakes (regular‑season points, playoff positioning, or exhibition implications), and late injuries, suspensions, or schedule changes are often decisive.
Market prices are a real‑time summary of how traders view the relative likelihood of each outcome; they move as information arrives and as traders trade. Treat prices as a dynamic signal—useful for comparing scenarios and timing but not a guarantee of the final result.
The market's close time is listed as TBD on the market page; typically markets close at or shortly before the scheduled match start. Resolution follows the platform's official rules and is based on the league's official final result for the game; if the game is postponed or canceled, the market will resolve according to the platform's stated contingency policies.
A 'win' is determined by the official outcome designated by the sport's governing body for the match (final score after regulation, or after overtime/penalties if the league rules that as the official result). The market resolves to whichever team is declared the official winner under those league rules.
Late injury or lineup news typically causes rapid price movement as traders update positions; such developments change market expectations but do not change resolution mechanics unless the game is delayed or canceled. For timely updates, follow official team communications and the market page's news feed.
Total volume traded gives a sense of how much activity and liquidity the market has seen: higher volume generally means more participants and easier entry/exit, while lower volume can indicate thinner liquidity and wider effective trading costs. Use volume as one input alongside price movement and order book depth.
Relevant history includes recent head‑to‑head results between these two teams, how each team performs home versus away, and recent meetings' scorelines and contexts. Prior matchups can inform expectations but should be weighed against current rosters, form, and any changes in coaching or tactics.