WBC World Baseball Classic Group C Final Match — Korea vs Australia kicks off tonight at 6 PM. Polymarket shows Korea with a 73% chance of winning and Australia at 28%, with a trading volume of $81,900. However, for Taiwan to advance to the quarterfinals, not only does Korea need to win, but the score must also reach a “minimum 8:3” point difference.
(Background: Polymarket pre-match prediction favored Australia to win, giving Taiwanese baseball fans a lesson in prediction markets.)
(Additional context: WBC Taiwan-Japan matchup on-chain win rates released: Taiwan’s “hope is only 9.6%”, with only two possible ways to advance from the group stage.)
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The WBC Group C qualifiers enter the final game — Korea vs Australia, tonight (March 9) at 6 PM at Tokyo Dome. The on-chain prediction market Polymarket offers odds of Korea at 73 cents (73% chance), Australia at 28 cents (28%), with a trading volume of $81,900 and a spread of just 1 cent, indicating high liquidity.
Korea currently stands at 1 win and 2 losses, fighting for survival; Australia is 2 wins and 1 loss. Japan has already secured first place with 3 wins and no losses and has advanced.
Taiwan is at 2 wins and 2 losses, and whether they advance depends entirely on the Korea-Australia game:
In short, although Polymarket gives Korea a 73% chance of winning, there are no contracts specifically betting on “Korea winning by more than 5 points,” so the data isn’t sufficient to predict the outcome. For Taiwanese fans, a Korea win isn’t enough; they need a “big win.”
For Korea, they must win tonight, but only if they keep their runs allowed under 3; Australia aims to win or at least defend, allowing no more than five runs. Online discussions have started to analyze this as a game theory “internal equilibrium.” Due to the length and complexity, below is an interpretation of the detailed situation:
The strategies described above are optimal for each side individually, but in reality, the outcome depends on the opponent’s choices. Even if Korea fights hard to win, if in the final moments Australia scores more than three runs, Korea’s chance to advance is lost.
Australia, even if they keep runs allowed under five, must still switch to offense if Korea catches up in score. If Korea scores five runs, Australia needs at least one run to have a chance; if Korea scores six, Australia must score at least two. This could lead to a late-game tug-of-war with one-point increments, revealing a hidden prisoner’s dilemma:
Assuming Korea’s high probability of winning based on odds, the initial expectation is Korea will lead in runs. But once Australia scores between 1-3 runs, both sides are forced into a scoring tug-of-war. Two main scenarios emerge:
Despite both sides having winning conditions, the various possible scenarios create a non-cooperative prisoner’s dilemma, where mutual elimination benefits Taiwan. The key is Korea leading and Australia entering the 1-3 run zone, triggering this strategic tug-of-war.
However, this scenario depends on Korea managing to score over 8 runs against Australia’s pitchers. Both teams’ bullpens are exhausted after the first three games, so the actual outcome will depend on their adjustments.
Polymarket’s predictions for this WBC have been impressive. In the first game, Polymarket gave Australia a 64% chance of winning and Taiwan only 36%, contrary to traditional betting odds that favored Taiwan at 70%. Ultimately, Taiwan lost 0-3 to Australia, confirming the crowd wisdom in the market.
Similarly, in the Japan vs Taiwan game, Polymarket assigned Japan a 90.8% chance and Taiwan only 9.6%, with Japan winning easily.
Polymarket has been expanding actively in sports. On February 28, it set a new single-day trading volume record of $425 million, with total February trading surpassing $7 billion—7.5 times higher than the same period last year. Earlier this month, betting platform Betr announced a multi-year partnership with Polymarket to offer prediction contracts to its 1 million paying users across sports, politics, and culture.
However, regulatory pressures are mounting. In January, the Nevada Gaming Control Board filed a civil lawsuit against Polymarket, demanding it cease offering contracts to Nevada residents without a proper gaming license. The CFTC claims exclusive jurisdiction over prediction markets.
After tonight’s Korea-Australia game, Polymarket’s prediction accuracy will be tested again. For Taiwanese fans, on-chain odds are just a reference; what truly matters is Korea’s offensive firepower tonight.