| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BYU | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Texas | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market predicts the winner of the college football game between Texas and BYU at BYU; it matters because the result affects each program's season record, national perception, and momentum.
Texas and BYU are well-known programs with different recent trajectories and conference situations; matchups between them draw attention for recruits, rankings, and program narratives. Past meetings and broader season context inform expectations, but current-season form, injuries, and coaching matchups are the primary drivers. The market listing currently shows no trading volume, so early prices may be especially sensitive to new information.
Prediction market odds express the collective judgment of traders about which team will win and update as new information (injuries, weather, starting lineups) becomes available; movements indicate changing expectations, not certainties.
The market settles on the official final result of the game as recorded by the game's official scorer; the team declared the winner after regulation or any overtime periods is the settled outcome.
The listing currently shows the close time as TBD; the market will close and settle according to the platform's posted schedule and resolution rules, so check the platform for any updates ahead of kickoff.
Resolution in those scenarios follows the platform's event rules—markets may be voided, delayed, or settled based on official records and the operator's policy—consult the platform's terms for the definitive procedure.
Monitor each team's starting quarterback and primary skill-position players (top receiver and lead running back), pass rushers and key defenders, offensive line health, and the kicking/return units; late scratches or injury-report updates are especially influential.
Low volume means prices may be driven by a small number of trades and can be more volatile when new information arrives; low liquidity makes it harder to interpret prices as broad consensus, so follow authoritative news (injury reports, starters announced) before acting.