One of the most common search terms that brings people to Boromarket is 'boro market sports predictions'. This guide covers exactly that: every sports category you can trade on the platform, with notes on where the genuine edges tend to live.
Football
Football is the deepest category on Boromarket. Premier League markets include title winner, top-four finish, relegation, golden boot, and individual match outcomes. FA Cup and Carabao Cup run throughout the season. International tournaments — Euros, World Cup qualifiers, Nations League — run as events approach.
The best edges in football markets tend to come from form divergence — when a team's recent underlying performance data (expected goals, shot quality) diverges significantly from their results-based reputation in the market.
Cricket
- →Test series winners (Ashes, India series, South Africa tours)
- →Individual match results across all three formats
- →Tournament winner markets for T20 World Cup and ICC events
- →Player performance markets (top scorer, top wicket-taker)
Tennis
Grand Slam winner markets are available year-round on an outright basis. In-tournament markets open as draws are made and update through each round. Women's tennis markets are growing — WTA tournaments now have meaningful liquidity alongside the men's tour.
Boxing and Combat Sports
Individual fight outcome markets open as bouts are announced. World title fights typically attract the most volume. Method-of-victory markets (KO/TKO vs decision) often show the most mispricing because the general market underweights finish probability in elite matchups.
Boxing markets on Boromarket often have the widest spreads compared to football. This reflects lower liquidity — but also means the market is less efficient and genuine edges are more available to people with real fight knowledge.
Other Sports
Rugby (Premiership and international), cycling (Tour de France, Giro d'Italia), golf (majors and European Tour events), darts, and snooker all have active markets. The Boromarket boro market sports range is broader than most UK-focused alternatives.