| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Orlando | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Miami | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win the Orlando at Miami game; it aggregates trader views on that single-game outcome and is useful for tracking how new information shifts expectations before tip-off.
Orlando vs. Miami is a regular-season NBA-style matchup between a young, developing roster and a veteran, often playoff-caliber club — historical results can swing from close contests to clear mismatches depending on roster availability and coaching matchups. Factors such as recent form, injuries, trades, and home-court advantage typically influence how each meeting plays out.
Market prices reflect how participants are valuing the two possible results and will update as lineup news, injuries, or other developments arrive; interpret price movement as the market’s collective reaction to new information rather than a fixed prediction.
The two outcomes correspond to the final-game winner: one outcome for Orlando winning and one for Miami winning, with settlement based on the official game result recorded by the league (including overtime) unless the market rules state otherwise.
The event page currently lists the market close as TBD; typically trading closes at the scheduled game start or at the platform-specified cutoff — check the market page for the confirmed close time before placing trades.
Resolution follows the platform’s rules: common outcomes include voiding the market, delaying settlement until the game is completed, or following a specified reschedule window; consult the market rules on the platform for the exact policy.
Watch official injury updates and expected lineups: changes to each team’s primary scorers, starting point guard, or rim protector can meaningfully shift expectations — for example, late news on a team’s top scorer, starting center, or a newly active trade acquisition.
Markets typically move rapidly on confirmed late scratches or announced minutes restrictions because those items change expected rotations and end-of-game roles; monitoring official injury reports, pregame warmups, and coach comments gives the clearest lead time for likely price movement.