| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marquette | 25% | 13¢ | 26¢ | — | $55 | Trade → |
| Utah | 60% | 70¢ | 87¢ | — | $20 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win the Utah vs Marquette college basketball matchup and provides a way to trade on collective expectations about that single-game outcome. It matters because market prices aggregate publicly available information and can move as injury news, lineup changes, or other developments arrive.
Utah (a Pac-12 program) and Marquette (a Big East program) are NCAA Division I teams with different conference schedules and often different stylistic profiles; they do not meet regularly in conference play, so matchups can hinge on roster and coaching matchups for the season. Team rosters, recent form, and coaching strategies are subject to turnover each year, so contemporary box-score and injury reports are typically more informative than older history.
Prices in this market reflect the balance of buy and sell interest from traders and update as new information becomes available; they are a real-time signal of trader expectations, not a guarantee of the outcome. Treat rapid price moves as reactions to news and low-volume moves as potentially noisy.
The close is listed as TBD; typically these markets close at or shortly before the official game start per the platform's event rules, so check the event page for the posted close time once it is set.
Each outcome corresponds to one team winning the game (Utah wins or Marquette wins); settlement is based on the official final game result reported by the event administrator, typically including any overtime unless the event description specifies otherwise.
Official injury reports, coach announcements, and confirmed lineup changes for Utah or Marquette are highly relevant and often move market prices quickly; unconfirmed rumors carry more risk and may be priced in slowly or inconsistently.
Head-to-head history can provide context but is often less predictive than current-season roster composition, coaching, and performance metrics because both programs can change substantially year to year; focus on recent matchups, tempo, and matchup-specific stats.
Low volume indicates limited liquidity: prices can be moved by small trades, information may be reflected slowly, and risk of wide spreads or noisy signals is higher, so treat price movements with caution and be mindful of position size relative to market depth.