| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tulane | 0% | 4¢ | 96¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Nicholls | 0% | 4¢ | 96¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win the Tulane vs Nicholls football game; it aggregates trader expectations and reacts to new game-day information. It matters for fans and traders tracking matchup-specific news, injuries, and team form.
Tulane competes at the FBS level (American Athletic Conference) while Nicholls competes at the FCS level (Southland Conference); FBS–FCS matchups are common and often reflect differences in roster depth and resources. Historical head-to-head meetings between these specific programs may be limited, so recent form, roster availability, and coaching matchups tend to carry extra weight when assessing the contest.
Market prices represent the crowd’s current expectations and will update as news arrives (injuries, starter announcements, weather). Treat prices as dynamic indicators of sentiment rather than definitive forecasts.
This market is binary: one outcome pays if Tulane wins and the other pays if Nicholls wins; the market will be settled based on the official game result as recorded by the event operator.
A late starting-QB injury is typically high-impact and will prompt rapid market adjustments as traders price in changed win expectancy, likely reflected in immediate price movement once the information is public.
Home-field factors—travel distance, crowd noise, familiarity with the stadium, and short-week logistics—are incorporated quickly into market prices and can materially shift perceived advantage in a single-game setting.
Markets will typically account for the FBS/FCS gap through expectations about roster depth and talent, but they also weigh current-season indicators, injuries, and matchup specifics; upsets remain possible and are priced when relevant signals appear.
Overtime outcomes are resolved by the official game result; for postponements or cancellations, settlement depends on the trading platform’s contingency rules—check KALSHI’s event policies—but markets are often voided or settled based on whether an official result is produced within the platform’s allowed window.