| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Milwaukee Admirals | 66% | 54¢ | 66¢ | — | $26 | Trade → |
| Rockford Icehogs | 0% | 34¢ | 46¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will prevail in the Rockford Icehogs vs Milwaukee Admirals matchup; it aggregates trader expectations and responds to game-day information. It matters because markets incorporate lineup news, injuries, and other developments quicker than many traditional sources.
Both clubs play in the American Hockey League (AHL), a professional development league where rosters change frequently due to NHL call-ups, send-downs, and short-term transactions. Historical head-to-head results and seasonal trends provide context, but game outcomes are often driven by last‑minute roster and goaltender decisions. Venue, travel schedules, and special-teams performance also shape matchups in this league.
Market odds reflect the collective judgment of traders and update as new information emerges; they should be read as a real-time signal that incorporates available news and sentiment. For contract resolution details (e.g., whether overtime/shootout counts), consult the event description on the platform.
The market close time is set by the exchange and may align with the scheduled puck drop or a platform-specific cutoff; check the event details on KALSHI for the official closing time.
Resolution rules depend on the contract text for this event; some markets use regulation-only outcomes while others include overtime and shootouts, so review the event description on the platform to know which result is used.
Late roster changes can materially shift the competitive balance—especially changes to starting goalies or top-line forwards—and markets typically move quickly when such news appears.
Head-to-head history can indicate matchup tendencies and stylistic advantages, but in the AHL it should be balanced with recent roster changes and current form, which often have a larger short-term impact.
Platform rules govern postponed or canceled events; common outcomes are voiding the market, rolling it to a rescheduled game, or resolving according to a specified contingency—check the exchange’s event rules for the exact policy.