| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| New York Y | 62% | 61¢ | 62¢ | — | $11K | Trade → |
| Pittsburgh | 39% | 38¢ | 39¢ | — | $2K | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win the scheduled matchup between Pittsburgh and New York Y; it matters because it aggregates publicly available information into a single, tradable signal about the expected game outcome.
The event is a head-to-head sports contest between two professional teams; each side brings current season form, roster construction, and recent results that shape expectations. Historical head-to-head trends, roster moves, and situational factors like travel or rest can all influence the likely outcome of a single game.
Market odds on this page represent the collective view of traders at a moment in time and update as injury news, lineup decisions, weather, and other information arrives; interpret them as a dynamic consensus rather than a fixed prediction.
The event page lists the close as TBD; the platform will announce a firm close time and cutoff for trading—check the live event page or platform notifications for updates.
Resolution follows the exchange's published event rules: if the game is completed at a later time, settlement is typically based on the official final result; if the contest is canceled without an official result, the platform's cancellation/resolution policy determines payouts—consult the event rules for specifics.
Most head-to-head sports markets settle on the official final result as recorded by the sport's governing authority, which normally includes extra innings or overtime; confirm the event terms on the platform to be certain.
Watch the announced starters (pitcher/goalkeeper/etc.), bullpen or bench depth, recent individual player form, matchup splits (left/right handedness where relevant), and late injury/designation updates—these items tend to drive last-minute market moves.
Zero or low traded volume indicates limited liquidity; prices may be more sensitive to individual trades, order books may be thin, and it could be harder to enter or exit large positions without moving price—monitor order depth and platform notices before trading.