| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5+ wins in a row | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Manchester United will record five consecutive match wins during the period labeled “this year.” It matters because a five-game winning streak is a clear signal of form and can influence team momentum, fan expectations, and related markets.
Manchester United is one of the biggest clubs in English and European football, competing across domestic and continental competitions with a large, rotating squad. Recent years have featured variable consistency, so sustained winning runs are scrutinized as indicators of tactical success, squad depth and injury management. The exact matches that count toward the streak depend on the market’s event rules.
Prediction market prices aggregate participants’ views based on available information (fixtures, injuries, results) and update as new information arrives. Treat market prices as a real-time summary of collective expectations, not a guarantee of outcome.
Resolution depends on the market’s event terms; most markets count official first-team match wins decided in regulation or extra time as wins, while treatment of penalty shootout results or administrative decisions varies and will be specified in the market rules.
The period labeled "this year" is defined in the market's event details; some markets use the calendar year and others use a season-based scope, so check the event description or resolution rules to confirm which period is used.
Typically only first-team competitive matches (league, domestic cups, UEFA competitions) are included, while friendlies, reserve, youth or exhibition matches are excluded; the exact inclusion list is specified by the market’s resolution criteria.
Postponed matches are usually not counted until they are played; abandoned or replayed matches are handled according to competition and market resolution rules, so check the market’s terms for how such situations are resolved.
Most markets count consecutive official first-team wins across competitions toward the same streak, so mixed-competition sequences normally qualify unless the event explicitly restricts counting to a single competition.