| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Orlando wins by over 1.5 goals | 6% | 7¢ | 8¢ | — | $469 | Trade → |
| New York City wins by over 2.5 goals | 11% | 13¢ | 14¢ | — | $465 | Trade → |
| Orlando wins by over 2.5 goals | 1% | 2¢ | 3¢ | — | $1 | Trade → |
| New York City wins by over 1.5 goals | 0% | 30¢ | 31¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which spread outcome will occur in the Orlando at New York City matchup, letting participants take a position on margin-related ranges rather than just winner/loser. Spread markets matter because they capture market consensus about expected competitiveness and margin of victory.
This is a four-outcome spreads market on a sporting contest between Orlando and New York City; the market has recorded $636 in total traded volume and the close time is listed as TBD. Because spreads break the final score into margin buckets, the market aggregates information about injuries, lineups, tactics and venue into price signals; low traded volume can also make those signals more sensitive to individual trades.
Interpret prices as the market’s collective view of which margin bucket is most likely, with higher prices indicating less market support for that outcome. Monitor prices alongside official pregame information (lineups, injury reports, weather) because those factors commonly shift spread expectations.
The market is split into four spread outcomes that correspond to different margin ranges for the final score; each outcome represents a distinct bucket of the point/goal spread (which side covers by a given margin or a push bucket if applicable).
The market's close is currently listed as TBD; typically spread markets close at or shortly before the official game start. The final outcome is settled by comparing the official final score to the spread buckets defined by the market rules, with any push/tie condition applied according to those rules.
Late injuries or unexpected starters can materially change expected margins—loss of a key attacker or defender shifts expected goals or points—so incorporate official pregame reports and consider that markets often move quickly when credible new information is released.
Head-to-head history can inform tendencies (e.g., consistently close matches, one-sided results at a venue), but it should be weighed alongside current-season form, injuries, venue, and tactical changes rather than used in isolation.
A total volume of $636 indicates relatively low liquidity, meaning prices may be sensitive to small trades and less stable than higher-volume markets; treat price moves cautiously, watch order depth, and size positions accordingly.