| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Purdue scores 10 points first | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Queens University scores 10 points first | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team — Queens University or Purdue — will be the first to reach 10 points in their matchup. It matters because early scoring patterns reveal which starters and strategies control the opening possessions, information traders use to update in-play expectations.
Queens University and Purdue may bring different roster constructions, styles, and levels of competition, so the first-phase tactics (opening lineups, pace, and shot selection) often determine who reaches early scoring milestones. Historical head-to-head data between these two programs may be limited, so live pregame reports and the first few possessions carry extra informational value.
Market prices reflect the crowd’s aggregated expectation about which team will hit the 10-point mark first and will move as new information arrives (starting lineups, tip possession, early scoring). Treat prices as dynamic summaries of visible evidence, not guarantees.
Settlement is determined by the official game record used by the platform: the team credited in the official box score/play-by-play with reaching 10 points first. Official timestamps and scorer designations are used to establish sequence.
If no team reaches 10 in the official contest, resolution follows the platform’s cancellation and voiding policies. Participants should refer to KALSHI’s event rules for how such cases are handled.
Only points recorded in the official game after tip-off count. Warmups, exhibitions, or unofficial scrimmages are excluded from settlement.
Resolution will rely on the official play-by-play details and timestamps; if the official record cannot separate the sequence, the platform’s tie-break or adjudication rules will apply. Check KALSHI’s documentation for specifics.
Track who has first possession, the outcome of the first few possessions (made shots, turnovers), early three-point attempts and makes, starting player substitutions or injuries, and immediate defensive pressure or foul patterns — these drive early scoring outcomes.