| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vermont | 75% | 74¢ | 75¢ | — | $2K | Trade → |
| University at Albany | 25% | 24¢ | 25¢ | — | $149 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win the University at Albany at Vermont matchup and aggregates trader expectations about the on-field outcome. It matters because it summarizes public information about team strength, availability, and game-day conditions in a single, continuously updating price.
Albany and Vermont are regular opponents within the same regional mid‑major conference structure and often meet in regular-season and conference play; those meetings produce useful context on matchup tendencies. Recent season trends, roster turnover, and coaching continuity shape how each program approaches this matchup, so current-season data matters more than decade-old results.
Market prices reflect the collective view of participants and move as new, game-specific information arrives (injuries, lineups, travel issues, etc.). Use the market as one input alongside box scores, injury reports, and film study rather than a definitive forecast.
The market close time is listed as TBD on the event page; watch the market for an announced close. Settlement occurs after the official game result is available and follows the platform's rules (typically after the final official box score or any league-certified outcome).
This event has two outcomes corresponding to which team wins the game (University at Albany wins or Vermont wins). The market resolves to the official winner; overtime is included as part of the game result and cancellations or forfeits are handled per market rules.
Watch the projected starters and primary scorers, the lead ball‑handler(s)/point guard(s), the primary rebounder/inside presence, and any key reserve who handles significant minutes. Late injury reports or lineup announcements for those roles are especially impactful.
Head-to-head history provides context about stylistic matchups and coaching tendencies but should be weighted against current-season rosters, recent results, and injuries. Prior games are most relevant when personnel and schemes remain similar.
Late injury or suspension reports, official starting lineup releases, travel or illness issues affecting either team, unexpected coaching changes, and significant new statistical information (e.g., a player returning from injury) tend to move this market. Large public wagers can also shift prices.