| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kansas | 90% | 87¢ | 90¢ | — | $462 | Trade → |
| UCF | 13% | 10¢ | 13¢ | — | $224 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win the game when UCF visits Kansas. It matters because market prices aggregate public expectations about the matchup and react to new information before and up to game time.
UCF at Kansas is a head-to-head college sports contest with the visiting UCF team traveling to Kansas's home venue; depending on the sport and season it can be a conference or non-conference game. Historical context — recent form, roster changes, and past meetings between the programs — often shapes expectations, but matchups can shift quickly with injuries, coaching moves, or late roster decisions.
Prediction market odds reflect the collective judgment of traders and update as news arrives; they are a real-time summary of sentiment and should be interpreted as a dynamic indicator rather than a fixed forecast.
This binary market represents which team is the official winner of the game: one outcome is an outright UCF win and the other is an outright Kansas win; resolution follows the sport’s official result and the platform’s settlement rules (including overtime if applicable).
The market will close at the time set by the platform prior to resolution; with a TBD close you should monitor the event page for the official cut-off because trading normally stops at or shortly before game start and late news can affect prices up until that point.
Resolution follows the platform’s stated policies: typical practice is to use the official result if the game is completed, including overtime; postponed or cancelled games are handled per the exchange’s cancellation or voiding rules—check the event rules for specifics.
Primary swing factors include the performance and availability of quarterbacks or primary scorers, turnover margin, effectiveness of the defensive front and secondary, and impact plays on special teams; coaching decisions and halftime adjustments also frequently determine close contests.
Low volume can mean thinner liquidity and larger price moves from relatively small trades; interpret signals cautiously, check the order book depth, and pay attention to news (injuries, weather, lineup announcements) that can move the market with limited trading activity.