| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Santa Clara | 83% | 81¢ | 83¢ | — | $33K | Trade → |
| Pacific | 19% | 17¢ | 19¢ | — | $14K | Trade → |
This prediction market asks which team will win the Pacific at Santa Clara matchup and aggregates traders' expectations about the game's outcome. It matters because it concentrates publicly available information about rosters, injuries, and situational factors into a single, tradable market signal.
Pacific and Santa Clara are collegiate programs whose matchup outcome depends on recent form, roster continuity, and coaching matchups; the two teams have met sporadically over past seasons, and past meetings can provide context but are not determinative. Home-field/court advantage at Santa Clara, travel schedules, and any late roster changes are important contextual elements. Market participants will price in visible information as it emerges leading up to and during the matchup.
Market prices reflect the collective view of participants and will move as new, relevant information becomes available (injuries, starting lineups, weather, etc.). They should be read as indicators of which outcome traders favor, not as guaranteed predictions of final score or margin.
The market's closing time is displayed on the market page; when listed as TBD, monitor the market for updates. On many platforms markets close at or shortly before the official game start, but always check the contract details for the exact close policy.
This market trades two mutually exclusive outcomes reflecting which team wins: Pacific wins or Santa Clara wins. Consult the contract description on the platform for how ties, cancellations, or overtime are resolved.
A late injury typically causes quick price adjustments as traders update expectations; the magnitude of movement depends on how central the player is to team performance and on market liquidity at that time.
Yes—head-to-head history, especially recent meetings, is one factor traders consider, but markets also weigh current-season performance, roster changes, and situational variables more heavily.
Total volume indicates the amount of money that has changed hands and is a rough measure of market interest and liquidity; higher volume generally means more active information aggregation and typically narrower price sensitivity to individual trades, while lower volume can lead to larger price swings on new information.