Resolution criteria
The Boxing Day Test runs December 26-30 at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. The market resolves YES if Australia wins the match (either by runs or wickets). It resolves NO if England wins or the match is drawn. Resolution will be determined by the official match result published on Cricket Australia or the ICC website.
Background
Australia has already retained the Ashes after taking a 3-0 lead in the series, so this is a dead-rubber match. Australia has won 68 of 117 Test matches at the MCG and lost just 32, with only four losses this century. Australia's overall win record in Boxing Day Tests stands at 61%. England's most recent Boxing Day Test win came in 2010/11 by an innings and 157 runs.
Considerations
Pat Cummins is out for the rest of the series to manage his workloads, and Nathan Lyon is sidelined after tearing his right hamstring in Adelaide. Steve Smith will captain the side. England have lost four Tests in a row and won only one of their past seven.
🏅 Top traders
| # | Trader | Total profit |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ṁ660 | |
| 2 | Ṁ91 | |
| 3 | Ṁ74 | |
| 4 | Ṁ18 | |
| 5 | Ṁ17 |
People are also trading
@NzJack0n The number is a figment of someone's imagination, your pool still has Yes and No shares. Don't worry about it.
@Eliza Yeah There is definitely still enough for trading, a small bet won’t take you to the max/min %. I’ve Never seen a negative number before. Im guessing because I started the market with a % above 50 and it’s going towards No there’s a subsidy ‘profit’ for the creator.
@NzJack0n It's basically because the number for "liquidity" is not real and is just invented based on some guesstimations.