Michigan and Duke share 19.5% implied probabilities as 2026 NCAA Tournament favorites, with Arizona close at 17.5%, driven by elite 2025 recruiting classes headlined by Duke's No. 1 prospect Cooper Flagg, Michigan's top-ranked haul under new coach Dusty May, and Arizona's transfer portal reinforcements like Jalen Bridges. This parity stems from widespread offseason talent infusion via high-end freshmen and portals, offsetting NBA draft losses and creating uncertainty around roster cohesion and early-season chemistry. Florida and Houston trail with strong returning cores and defensive identities, but the top trio's blue-chip influx reflects trader consensus on their March Madness ceiling amid a deep field of potential bracket-busters.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · UpdatedMichigan 20%
Duke 20%
Arizona 17.5%
Florida 9.8%
$12,861,282 Vol.
$12,861,282 Vol.
Michigan
20%
Duke
20%
Arizona
18%
Florida
10%
Houston
8%
Iowa State
5%
Purdue
4%
Illinois
3%
Connecticut
3%
Arkansas
2%
Michigan State
1%
Virginia
1%
Gonzaga
1%
Vanderbilt
1%
St John's
1%
Kansas
1%
UCLA
1%
Louisville
1%
Wisconsin
1%
Alabama
<1%
Tennessee
<1%
Nebraska
<1%
Kentucky
<1%
BYU
<1%
Texas Tech
<1%
North Carolina
<1%
Miami (FL)
<1%
Ohio State
<1%
St. Mary's
<1%
Villanova
<1%
Missouri
<1%
Iowa
<1%
Texas A&M
<1%
Georgia
<1%
Saint Louis
<1%
Clemson
<1%
TCU
<1%
Santa Clara
<1%
UCF
<1%
South Florida
<1%
Miami (OH)
<1%
SMU
<1%
Norhtern Iowa
<1%
North Dakota State
<1%
LIU
<1%
High Point
<1%
Kennesaw State
<1%
Prairie View A&M
<1%
Troy
<1%
Idaho
<1%
Hofstra
<1%
Akron
<1%
McNeese
<1%
VCU
<1%
Texas
<1%
Siena
<1%
Cal Baptist
<1%
Furman
<1%
Utah State
<1%
Hawaii
<1%
Queens
<1%
Lehigh
<1%
Penn
<1%
Tennessee State
<1%
Howard
<1%
Wright State
<1%
Michigan 20%
Duke 20%
Arizona 17.5%
Florida 9.8%
$12,861,282 Vol.
$12,861,282 Vol.
Michigan
20%
Duke
20%
Arizona
18%
Florida
10%
Houston
8%
Iowa State
5%
Purdue
4%
Illinois
3%
Connecticut
3%
Arkansas
2%
Michigan State
1%
Virginia
1%
Gonzaga
1%
Vanderbilt
1%
St John's
1%
Kansas
1%
UCLA
1%
Louisville
1%
Wisconsin
1%
Alabama
<1%
Tennessee
<1%
Nebraska
<1%
Kentucky
<1%
BYU
<1%
Texas Tech
<1%
North Carolina
<1%
Miami (FL)
<1%
Ohio State
<1%
St. Mary's
<1%
Villanova
<1%
Missouri
<1%
Iowa
<1%
Texas A&M
<1%
Georgia
<1%
Saint Louis
<1%
Clemson
<1%
TCU
<1%
Santa Clara
<1%
UCF
<1%
South Florida
<1%
Miami (OH)
<1%
SMU
<1%
Norhtern Iowa
<1%
North Dakota State
<1%
LIU
<1%
High Point
<1%
Kennesaw State
<1%
Prairie View A&M
<1%
Troy
<1%
Idaho
<1%
Hofstra
<1%
Akron
<1%
McNeese
<1%
VCU
<1%
Texas
<1%
Siena
<1%
Cal Baptist
<1%
Furman
<1%
Utah State
<1%
Hawaii
<1%
Queens
<1%
Lehigh
<1%
Penn
<1%
Tennessee State
<1%
Howard
<1%
Wright State
<1%
If it is impossible for a team to win the 2026 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament according to the rules of the competition (i.e. they are eliminated) , the corresponding market will immediately resolve to “No”.
If for any reason no winner is declared by December 31, 2026, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve to "Other".
The resolution source for this market will be information from the NCAA.
Market Opened: Oct 31, 2025, 7:31 PM ET
Resolver
0x2F5e3684c...Resolver
0x2F5e3684c...Michigan and Duke share 19.5% implied probabilities as 2026 NCAA Tournament favorites, with Arizona close at 17.5%, driven by elite 2025 recruiting classes headlined by Duke's No. 1 prospect Cooper Flagg, Michigan's top-ranked haul under new coach Dusty May, and Arizona's transfer portal reinforcements like Jalen Bridges. This parity stems from widespread offseason talent infusion via high-end freshmen and portals, offsetting NBA draft losses and creating uncertainty around roster cohesion and early-season chemistry. Florida and Houston trail with strong returning cores and defensive identities, but the top trio's blue-chip influx reflects trader consensus on their March Madness ceiling amid a deep field of potential bracket-busters.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated


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