| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Winnipeg wins by over 1.5 goals | 48% | 48¢ | 49¢ | — | $963 | Trade → |
| Vancouver wins by over 1.5 goals | 13% | 12¢ | 13¢ | — | $222 | Trade → |
| Winnipeg wins by over 2.5 goals | 38% | 36¢ | 38¢ | — | $36 | Trade → |
| Vancouver wins by over 2.5 goals | 5% | 6¢ | 9¢ | — | $1 | Trade → |
This prediction market asks which spread-range outcome will occur in the Vancouver at Winnipeg game; it matters to traders who want to express views on the margin of victory rather than just the winner.
Vancouver (Canucks) and Winnipeg (Jets) are NHL clubs whose matchups are influenced by goaltending, roster health, special teams and travel. Historical head-to-head results, recent form and any scheduling quirks (back-to-backs, long road trips) shape expectations for the scoring margin in a given game.
Market prices reflect the collective market view about which spread-range is most likely given available information; they move as new information (lineups, injuries, travel, in-game developments) arrives. Use the market as a live indicator of how participants value different margin outcomes, not as a fixed forecast.
The market will resolve based on the official final score reported by the league for this game; whether overtime or a shootout counts is governed by the market’s official resolution rules on the platform, so check the event page for those specifics. The market’s close time is currently listed as TBD, and the outcome is determined after the game and any official corrections.
The four outcomes partition the range of possible scoring margins into mutually exclusive buckets—some favor Vancouver winning by particular margins and some favor Winnipeg doing so. Consult the market page to see the exact margin ranges associated with each outcome before trading.
The starting goaltenders are usually the single biggest influence on the final margin, followed by availability of top-line scorers and key penalty-killing or power-play specialists; late scratches or goalie changes have outsized effects on expected margins.
If trading remains open, significant in-game developments—goals that change the margin, major penalties, injuries to key players—will typically move prices quickly as traders adjust to the new probability of each spread bucket. Final resolution still depends on the official end-of-game margin.
Relatively low traded volume indicates limited liquidity, which can lead to wider bid-ask spreads and larger price impact for sizable orders; traders should be prepared for greater slippage and consider position size and order type accordingly.