| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Virginia | 63% | 57¢ | 63¢ | — | $1 | Trade → |
| Charlotte | 0% | 37¢ | 56¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market resolves on the outcome of the Virginia vs Charlotte matchup and lets traders express a view on which team will win. It matters to fans and bettors because it aggregates public information about both teams into a continuously updating price.
Virginia and Charlotte are the two teams competing in this scheduled game; the matchup's context depends on the sport, season timing, and each program's recent form. Historical meetings, coaching styles, roster composition, and in-season developments (injuries, suspensions, lineup changes) all shape expectations coming into the contest.
Market prices reflect traders’ collective assessment of which outcome is more likely given available information and will move as new information arrives. Use market prices as a real-time signal alongside official injury reports, starting lineups, and matchup analysis rather than as definitive predictions.
The market's close time is listed as TBD; monitor the market page for the definitive close time, which is typically set before the game's scheduled start and may update if the game time changes.
Because this market has two outcomes, the traded possibilities are the two teams winning the game—one outcome for a Virginia win and the other for a Charlotte win.
Watch for official injury reports, press-conference notes, and last-minute lineup announcements that mention each team's primary scorers, starting backcourt or quarterback (depending on sport), and any defensive anchors; absences among those players have the largest impact.
Home advantage can influence travel fatigue, crowd impact, and referee tendencies; confirm which team is hosting and consider how travel distance and time zones might affect the visiting team's preparation.
Head-to-head history can provide context—especially recent meetings—but current-season form, roster changes, and situational factors typically matter more for the immediate outcome; use historical data as one input among several.