| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Over 160.5 points scored | 22% | 16¢ | 22¢ | — | $729 | Trade → |
| Over 145.5 points scored | 54% | 50¢ | 54¢ | — | $315 | Trade → |
| Over 148.5 points scored | 42% | 42¢ | 46¢ | — | $82 | Trade → |
| Over 139.5 points scored | 69% | 64¢ | 68¢ | — | $21 | Trade → |
| Over 142.5 points scored | 61% | 56¢ | 61¢ | — | $10 | Trade → |
| Over 151.5 points scored | 0% | 34¢ | 39¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Over 130.5 points scored | 0% | 81¢ | 85¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Over 136.5 points scored | 0% | 69¢ | 76¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Over 157.5 points scored | 0% | 21¢ | 26¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Over 154.5 points scored | 0% | 27¢ | 32¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Over 133.5 points scored | 0% | 75¢ | 81¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks traders to predict the combined total points scored by Oregon and Illinois in their matchup. It matters because aggregated market prices reflect real-time expectations about game tempo, scoring efficiency, and game-day conditions.
Oregon and Illinois are college football programs with differing offensive philosophies and personnel; direct head-to-head history is limited, so recent season form and roster changes matter more than long-ago matchups. Game location, coaching gameplans, and late-season factors (injuries, weather) commonly drive scoring outcomes in single-match markets.
Market prices are a running consensus of participants’ expectations about the final combined score and update as new information arrives. Use them as a signal about how the crowd is interpreting game-relevant news, not as a certainty about the result.
The market will close at the platform-specified cutoff prior to kickoff (check the event page for the exact cutoff). It resolves after the game using the official final score source named in the contract; settlement timing follows the platform’s resolution procedures.
Whether overtime counts depends on the market’s resolution text. Many total-points markets use the official final score (which includes overtime) but you should confirm the contract language on the event page to be certain.
The 11 discrete outcomes typically correspond to specific total-point ranges or buckets used by the market creator; consult the market description to see the exact mapping and payout rules for each outcome.
Settlement for postponement or cancellation follows the platform’s cancellation and force-majeure rules laid out in the event contract. That may include voiding positions, settling based on an alternate date, or using an official ruling—check the event terms for the governing policy.
Late news can materially shift expectations for total points; active traders typically update positions as injury reports, starting-lineup announcements, and weather updates arrive. Because prices react quickly, verify official sources (team reports, meteorological data) and confirm cutoff timing before placing trades.