| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SAW | 29% | 28¢ | 29¢ | — | $5K | Trade → |
| EYEBALLERS | 72% | 71¢ | 73¢ | — | $2K | Trade → |
This market asks which side will win the SAW vs. EYEBALLERS matchup; it matters because traders can use it to express views on the game outcome and to hedge or speculate as new information arrives.
SAW and EYEBALLERS are the two named competitors for a single binary outcome on KALSHI; the event page currently lists a closing time as TBD and shows no trading activity yet. Because league, format, venue, or tie-break rules can vary by sport or organizer, participants should check the event description and official sources for the specific match rules that will determine settlement.
Market prices (odds) represent the consensus view of market participants at any moment and will move as news — injuries, lineups, weather, or other developments — arrives; interpret changes as the market updating its assessment rather than as guarantees of the final result.
The page currently lists the market close as TBD; KALSHI markets typically close before the event begins and any definitive close time or trading cutoff will be posted on the event page — check back for updates and allow time for order processing before kickoff.
Settlement follows the outcome defined in the event description and relies on the official result from the match organizer or governing body named on the KALSHI page; if the event definition specifies overtime, shootout, or other tie-breakers, those procedures will be used to determine the winning outcome.
Resolution depends on the platform’s event rules: a short postponement often leads to the market remaining open until the match is replayed, while a cancellation beyond the stated resolution window typically results in voiding and refunds — consult the event’s settlement terms on KALSHI for the precise policy.
Late injury or lineup news can shift expectations quickly; prioritize official team communications and reliable beat reporters, watch pre-match warmups, and recognize that markets may move sharply on credible late information.
Low liquidity means orders can move the market significantly and execution risk is higher; consider smaller position sizes, use limit orders rather than large market orders, and monitor for incoming information that might attract other participants and improve liquidity.