| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duquesne | 54% | 51¢ | 54¢ | — | $192 | Trade → |
| Rhode Island | 48% | 46¢ | 48¢ | — | $116 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win the Rhode Island at Duquesne basketball game; it matters because market prices aggregate bettors' expectations about the matchup in real time.
Rhode Island and Duquesne are NCAA Division I programs and Atlantic 10 conference opponents, so the game can carry conference standing and postseason implications. Historical matchups, roster continuity, and recent scheduling (home/away stretch) all shape how each team enters the contest.
Market prices reflect the consensus view of traders based on available information (injuries, lineups, travel, recent form) and will move as new information arrives; interpret prices as a dynamic signal rather than a fixed forecast.
The market will close at the official scheduled start time of the Rhode Island at Duquesne game as listed on the KALSHI market page; the close is currently TBD, so monitor the market for any posted start-time or closure updates.
The market presents two outcomes corresponding to the game result: one outcome pays if Rhode Island wins the game and the other pays if Duquesne wins, with settlement based on the official final score as defined by the market rules.
Late injury or lineup news can produce rapid price moves because it directly changes team strength and rotation; check team injury reports, pregame confirmations, and trusted news sources before trading, and expect higher volatility around those announcements.
Yes — home-court factors such as travel, crowd support, arena familiarity, and routine typically influence expectations and are incorporated into market prices; the size of that effect depends on team-specific history and context for this matchup.
A total volume of $24 indicates relatively low liquidity, meaning prices can be more volatile and single trades may move the market substantially; exercise caution on trade size, check order-book depth, and be aware that spreads may be wider.