| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Western Carolina | 0% | 2¢ | 98¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Charlotte | 0% | 2¢ | 98¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win the scheduled game between Western Carolina and Charlotte. It matters to traders because game outcomes are driven by team matchups, situational factors, and new information released up to kickoff.
Western Carolina (an FCS program) and Charlotte (an FBS program) come from different levels of NCAA competition, which can affect roster depth and style of play; past meetings between programs of different subdivisions have produced both expected and upset results. Historical context such as recent seasons, coaching changes, and head-to-head history can shape expectations, but single-game outcomes are often determined by short-term factors like injuries and preparation.
Market prices reflect the collective assessment of market participants about which team will win this specific game; interpret changes in prices as the market updating on new information (injuries, weather, lineup announcements, betting lines, etc.). Use the market as one input alongside official rosters, injury reports, and matchup analysis.
The market is resolved based on the official winner of the scheduled game as recorded by the event’s official authority; overtime results count toward the final winner unless the market page states a different resolution rule.
The page lists the market close as TBD; typically markets close sometime before or at kickoff and resolve after the official final score is posted — check the event page for the exact close time and any special resolution provisions.
Monitor official team injury reports, press conferences, and game-day depth charts; late changes to starting quarterbacks or key defenders materially change the matchup and are often quickly reflected in market prices.
Resolution depends on the market’s posted rules: some markets void or refund trades if a game isn’t completed by a cutoff date, while others follow the sport governing body’s official ruling (forfeit, reschedule outcome). Check the event’s resolution policy for specifics.
Key influences include each team’s starting quarterback and offensive line, the opponent’s pass rush and run-stopping front, turnovers and red-zone efficiency, and special teams; watch for matchups where one unit clearly outperforms the corresponding opponent unit on game day.