| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| North Carolina A&T | 0% | 24¢ | 35¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Campbell | 0% | 59¢ | 71¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Tie | 0% | 0¢ | 10¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will be leading at the official first-half whistle in the North Carolina A&T vs Campbell game; it matters because first-half outcomes isolate early game performance and are commonly used for hedging or short-term trading.
North Carolina A&T and Campbell are collegiate football programs whose early-game tendencies—tempo, opening drives, and special teams—often shape halftime results. First-half markets capture a different slice of the contest than full-game markets because halftime leaders can change after halftime adjustments and depth-of-roster factors.
Market prices reflect the collective view of which of the three outcomes (North Carolina A&T leading, Campbell leading, or a tie) is most likely at halftime and update as new information arrives, such as starting lineups, injury reports, or weather conditions.
The outcome is determined by the official score at the end of the first half (the end of the second quarter). If one team has more points at that moment that team is the first-half winner; if the scores are level, the tie outcome is used.
This market closes at the time specified by the platform prior to kickoff; it settles based on the official halftime score reported by the game's governing box score. If the game is postponed, canceled, or not played, platform-specific resolution rules apply.
The three outcomes are: North Carolina A&T leading at halftime, Campbell leading at halftime, and a tie at halftime (scores level at the official halftime whistle).
Key influences are the starting quarterbacks, primary running backs and receivers involved in early-game series, the offensive line matchups that determine rushing and pass protection, and special-teams players who can produce immediate field-position or scoring changes.
Prioritize recent games for patterns like opening-drive scoring, halftime leads, and turnover rates; account for roster turnover, coaching changes, and situational context (home/away, short week, injuries) because older head-to-head results may be poor predictors of the specific first-half outcome.