| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mananchaya Sawangkaew | 77% | 45¢ | 64¢ | — | $2 | Trade → |
| Marina Stakusic | 52% | 52¢ | 78¢ | — | $2 | Trade → |
This market is a head-to-head bet on the outcome of the match titled "Stakusic vs Sawangkaew." It matters to traders and fans because it aggregates real-time expectations about which competitor will be declared the official winner.
This event pits two named athletes against one another in a single-match contest; the specific competition format, venue, and timing are set by the event organizer and may affect preparation and strategy. Historical context — such as each athlete's recent results, experience at the event level, and any prior meetings between them — is often the most relevant background for evaluating the matchup.
Market prices reflect the collective judgement of participants about who will win, and they update as new information arrives (injury news, lineup changes, weather, etc.). Use prices as a dynamic signal, not a fixed prediction: they summarize current expectations, which can change rapidly with event-specific developments.
The market resolves based on the official result published by the event organizer or recognized governing body: the outcome that entity lists as the match winner determines settlement. If the official result is a no-contest, tie, or otherwise unusual, settlement follows the platform's published rules for such cases.
If the match is postponed, the market may remain open until an official result is available; if the match is cancelled or declared a no-contest, the platform will resolve the market according to its contingency policies — check the event page or terms for how those scenarios are handled.
Official results are taken from the competition's organizer, the event's official scoreboard or communications, and broadly recognized sports authorities; the market operator lists which sources it relies on for resolution in the event description or rulebook.
Useful information includes each athlete's recent match results, physical condition and medical reports, any prior encounters between them, the competition surface or rules that may favor one style over another, and the timing of the match within the broader event schedule.
Yes — low liquidity means prices can move sharply on small trades and may not fully reflect broader information. Treat prices with caution, supplement them with independent event-specific research, and be aware that a few trades can create large apparent shifts in expectation.