| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hole-in-one? | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether a hole-in-one will be recorded during the Valspar Championship. It matters because aces are notable, verifiable events that can influence attention, player bonuses, and market resolution.
The Valspar Championship is a PGA Tour event traditionally played at the Copperhead Course in Florida, where tournament setup, par-3 placement, and green design shape scoring opportunities. Hole-in-ones are rare but do occur at professional events; their likelihood in any edition depends on course setup, weather, and the specific player field.
Market odds reflect the market’s collective view of whether an ace will occur and will move as new information arrives (player entries, tee times, pin sheets, and weather). Use changes in the market as a signal of evolving expectations rather than a fixed prediction.
Unless the market description specifies otherwise, only shots recorded during official tournament play (the championship rounds designated by the tournament) count; practice, pro-am, and unofficial events usually do not qualify.
A hole-in-one is a single-stroke tee shot that goes directly into the cup and is recorded as such in the official tournament scoring. The market will follow official PGA Tour scoring and rulings for validation.
If the market is structured as an 'occurrence' outcome (at least one ace), it resolves in the affirmative if any official hole-in-one is recorded; multiple aces do not change a single yes/no resolution.
Only the course’s par-3 holes are candidates for a hole-in-one; which specific par-3s present the best opportunity depends on that year’s tee placements and pin sheets, so consult the tournament hole assignments for the edition in question.
Closing time will be set and announced by the market operator prior to resolution; the final determination will be based on official PGA Tour reports and the tournament’s official scoring logs.