| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Radford | 33% | 32¢ | 33¢ | — | $906 | Trade → |
| High Point | 68% | 67¢ | 68¢ | — | $598 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win the college basketball game between Radford and High Point. It matters to traders and fans because it aggregates real-time expectations about the game's outcome and responds to new information like injuries and starting lineups.
Radford and High Point are NCAA programs that meet periodically in nonconference or conference play; matchups can reflect differences in style, roster turnover, and home-court. Historical results give context but rosters and coaches change season to season, so recent form and current availability usually matter most.
Market odds summarize how participants are trading expectations about which team will win; movements incorporate new information such as injury news, lineup announcements, or public sentiment. For specifics on settlement rules and exact outcome definitions, check the market page before trading.
Market-close timing is set by the platform and typically occurs at or just before official tip-off; because this event lists the close as TBD, check the market page or platform notifications for the final closing time.
This event lists two outcomes corresponding to which team wins the game; consult the market description for exact wording and the settlement rules (for example, whether settlement includes overtime).
Monitor each team’s confirmed starting five, leading scorers and primary ball-handlers, plus any players listed on the injury report; watch pregame releases and media updates for late changes that will materially affect team roles.
Head-to-head history can provide context about stylistic or matchup advantages, but its predictive value is limited by roster turnover, coaching changes, and how recent the meetings were—give greater weight to current-season performance and recent trends.
Zero or low volume indicates low liquidity, which can produce wide bid–ask spreads and abrupt price moves when someone places an order; if volume is low, verify order book depth and be cautious about trade size and execution risk.