Crowdtells

Sports Kalshi June 24, 2026

Braves visit Padres

Atlanta vs San Diego

Kalshi prices this San Diego at 51%. The reporting broadly agrees.

The Atlanta Braves are set to play the San Diego Padres in a professional baseball game. This matchup is significant as both teams are looking to secure a win. Traders put the odds at 51%, reflecting the close competition between the two teams.

Background

The Braves and Padres have a long history of competition, with the two teams often vying for top spots in their respective divisions. The current season has seen both teams experience ups and downs, making this matchup crucial for their standings.

What the coverage agrees on

  • The Braves and Padres are playing a professional baseball game
  • The game is scheduled for June 24

What to watch

The game is scheduled to take place on June 24 at 8:40 PM EDT, and fans will be watching to see which team comes out on top.

The numbers behind this

Kalshi prices this San Diego at 51%.

24h +1.0 pts

$4.1M traded · $3.8M in the last day · $2.7M open interest

Resolves on: If San Diego wins the Atlanta vs San Diego professional baseball game originally scheduled for Jun 23, 2026 at 9:40 PM EDT, then the market resolves to Yes.

Pricing Kalshi 51% Polymarket 90%

See live odds & discussion →

Sources

Frequently asked questions

Atlanta vs San Diego

Kalshi prices this San Diego at 51%. The reporting broadly agrees.

What do the sources agree on?

The Braves and Padres are playing a professional baseball game The game is scheduled for June 24

When does this market resolve?

This market resolves on: If San Diego wins the Atlanta vs San Diego professional baseball game originally scheduled for Jun 23, 2026 at 9:40 PM EDT, then the market resolves to Yes.

How are these odds set?

Prediction-market odds are prices set by people trading real money on the outcome, so the price reads as the crowd’s implied probability — not a guarantee or financial advice.

AI-written briefing grounded in 8 sources and the live market, edited by Samuel Jo. Odds are crowd probabilities, not advice — how this works.