| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Illinois | 89% | 87¢ | 89¢ | — | $409 | Trade → |
| Wisconsin | 13% | 9¢ | 12¢ | — | $103 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win the head-to-head game between Wisconsin (visiting) and Illinois (home). It matters to fans, season standings, and those tracking matchup expectations between two Big Ten programs.
Wisconsin and Illinois meet as conference opponents with a multi-year history of competitive games; the specific dynamics depend on the sport and season context. Team strengths, recent form, injuries and coaching changes in the weeks leading up to the game all shape expectations. Because the event listing shows Wisconsin at Illinois, Wisconsin is the designated road team and Illinois is the host.
Market prices represent the collective expectations of participants and will move as new information (injuries, weather, lineup announcements) arrives; they are a running consensus, not a guarantee, and settle based on the official game outcome that the platform specifies.
The market offers two mutually exclusive outcomes corresponding to which team wins the game: a Wisconsin win or an Illinois win; ties or other results are settled according to the platform's official rules.
This listing shows the close time as TBD; the platform will typically update the market with a scheduled close before the game, and it may close at kickoff or another platform-specified time—check the event page for updates.
Settlement procedures for postponed or canceled games follow the platform's rules—commonly markets are voided or settled based on official league determinations—so review the platform's event-settlement policy for this market.
Most head-to-head win markets settle on the official final result as recorded by the governing league, which generally includes overtime outcomes; confirm the platform's settlement criteria on the event page.
Last-minute personnel news is often the biggest short-term driver of market movement: absences of starters or unexpected returns can materially change expectations, and markets typically react quickly as participants update positions.