| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ole Miss | 97% | 93¢ | 99¢ | — | $436 | Trade → |
| North Alabama | 28% | 2¢ | 29¢ | — | $36 | Trade → |
This market tracks trader expectations for the outcome of the North Alabama vs Ole Miss football game and aggregates sentiment about which team will win. It matters to fans and market participants as a real-time gauge of how news and public view shape expectations for this specific matchup.
Ole Miss is an SEC program that typically competes at the Power Five FBS level, while North Alabama is a smaller program that has recently been transitioning into higher divisions of college football. That conference and resource gap often shapes pregame assessments, but single-game factors — injuries, turnovers, coaching matchups, and game location — can produce surprises in any matchup.
Prices in this prediction market reflect the collective view of traders about this particular game's outcome and move as new information arrives. Treat market prices as dynamic signals tied to news, lineup releases, and shifting sentiment rather than fixed forecasts.
The market close time is listed as TBD; check the KALSHI event page for the official closing time, which is typically set before game start and may update if scheduling changes occur.
This event lists two outcomes, corresponding to which team wins the game (the North Alabama win outcome and the Ole Miss win outcome).
Material injury reports or announced absences for starters — especially quarterbacks or impact defenders — tend to provoke rapid price movement as traders update expectations for the matchup.
Prices can update within minutes to hours after such announcements as traders react; the speed depends on how many participants see and act on the news and how conclusive the reports are.
Conference strength and recruiting resources provide a baseline expectation, but weigh them alongside immediate, game-specific facts — injuries, recent form, travel, and matchup quirks — rather than treating conference affiliation as the sole determinant.