| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| San Francisco wins by over 3.5 Points | 52% | 50¢ | 52¢ | — | $44K | Trade → |
| Oregon St. wins by over 3.5 Points | 30% | 26¢ | 30¢ | — | $1K | Trade → |
| San Francisco wins by over 6.5 Points | 41% | 38¢ | 41¢ | — | $671 | Trade → |
| Oregon St. wins by over 12.5 Points | 8% | 5¢ | 8¢ | — | $465 | Trade → |
| Oregon St. wins by over 15.5 Points | 4% | 3¢ | 5¢ | — | $116 | Trade → |
| San Francisco wins by over 9.5 Points | 30% | 30¢ | 31¢ | — | $102 | Trade → |
| San Francisco wins by over 12.5 Points | 23% | 20¢ | 23¢ | — | $87 | Trade → |
| Oregon St. wins by over 6.5 Points | 17% | 17¢ | 21¢ | — | $67 | Trade → |
| Oregon St. wins by over 9.5 Points | 5% | 11¢ | 15¢ | — | $6 | Trade → |
| Oregon St. wins by over 18.5 Points | 0% | 3¢ | 4¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market lets traders take positions on the point-spread outcome of the San Francisco at Oregon State game; spread markets matter because they capture collective expectations about the margin of victory and allow traders to express views on relative strength rather than just who wins.
San Francisco and Oregon State meet with a matchup-specific context: travel, recent form, and lineup availability shape expectations more than historical labels. College sports matchups can swing from game to game, so markets for spreads often reflect short‑term noise (injuries, rotations) as well as season‑long trends.
Prices in a spread market summarize how traders are weighting different margin outcomes; compare the market distribution to published lines and your own read of matchup factors to decide whether you see value.
The market’s close time is currently listed as TBD; check the event page or your account notifications for the official close announcement. On most platforms spread markets close shortly before the game begins to allow settlement based on the full contest.
Settlement is based on the official final margin of the game compared to the spread brackets defined by the market; consult the platform’s settlement rules to confirm whether overtime is included and which official game source is used.
Multiple outcomes divide the range of possible final margins into discrete brackets so traders can take positions on narrower margin bands rather than a single binary win/lose outcome.
Monitor each team’s projected starters and any questions at key positions: primary scorer/creator, interior defender or rebounder, and the depth of the bench. A sudden absence or reduced minutes for any of those roles will be the most likely on‑field factor to move the spread.
Markets typically react rapidly to credible, confirmed information. The magnitude of movement depends on the perceived impact of the news and current market liquidity—smaller volume can lead to larger price moves for the same piece of news.