yes $72,900 or above,yes Brian Campbell,yes Ben Griffin,yes Chris Gotterup,yes Dustin Johnson,yes Gary Woodland,yes Harris English,yes Jacob Bridgeman,yes Jason Day,yes Jake Knapp,yes Keegan Bradley,yes Ludvig Aberg,yes Michael Brennan,yes Matt Fitzpatrick,yes Max Homa,yes Nick Taylor,yes Patrick Cantlay,yes Ryan Gerard,yes Russell Henley,yes Sam Burns,yes Sergio Garcia,yes Sungjae Im,yes Tommy Fleetwood,yes Wyndham Clark,yes Rory McIlroy
What do these odds mean?
Cross-platform data for yes $72,900 or above,yes Brian Campbell,yes Ben Griffin,yes Chris Gotterup,yes Dustin Johnson,yes Gary Woodland,yes Harris English,yes Jacob Bridgeman,yes Jason Day,yes Jake Knapp,yes Keegan Bradley,yes Ludvig Aberg,yes Michael Brennan,yes Matt Fitzpatrick,yes Max Homa,yes Nick Taylor,yes Patrick Cantlay,yes Ryan Gerard,yes Russell Henley,yes Sam Burns,yes Sergio Garcia,yes Sungjae Im,yes Tommy Fleetwood,yes Wyndham Clark,yes Rory McIlroy is still being collected.
How to read cross-platform spreads
When two platforms price the same event meaningfully differently, it usually means one of three things: liquidity is thin on one side, fee structures are pushing a spread, or traders on one platform have information the other lacks. Spreads larger than 5 percentage points on events with over $50K in volume often resolve toward the higher-volume platform's price.
About this data
Beeks.ai aggregates prediction market data from Polymarket, Kalshi, and Manifold. Updates run every minute. Consensus probability is a volume-weighted average across all matched markets. Historical snapshots are stored for calibration analysis.
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