This market refers to the Major League Pickleball team matchup between Los Angeles Mad Drops and Palm Beach Royals at Edward Jones Mid-Season Tournament, scheduled for July 11 at 1:00PM ET.
This market will resolve to 'Los Angeles Mad Drops' if Los Angeles Mad Drops wins the overall team matchup against Palm Beach Royals.
This market will resolve to 'Palm Beach Royals' if Palm Beach Royals wins the overall team matchup against Los Angeles Mad Drops.
If the matchup is canceled (not played at all), ends in a tie, or is delayed beyond 7 days from the scheduled date without a winner determined, this market will resolve to 50-50.
The primary resolution source for this market is the official statistics of the event as recognized by the governing body or event organizers. However, if the governing body or event organizers have not published final match statistics within 2 hours after the event's conclusion, a consensus of credible reporting may be used instead. All markets will settle based on the official final result as recognized by the governing body or event organizers. Revisions to officially declared final scores made after market resolution will not be accounted for in determining the outcome.
Edward Jones Mid-Season Tournament: Los Angeles Mad Drops vs Palm Beach Royals


Game context
Los Angeles Mad Drops and Palm Beach Royals enter their Edward Jones MLP Mid-Season Tournament matchup in Grand Rapids with balanced rosters and recent form that supports the even implied probability. The Mad Drops feature Ben Johns alongside Catherine Parenteau and Jade Kawamoto, who have combined for strong group-stage results and a top league record near 15-2 entering the event, while the Royals rely on consistent doubles pairings and players like Dekel Bar and Tyson McGuffin despite lineup adjustments. Both squads have secured mid-pack to upper standings points in prior 2026 stops, with head-to-head history and mixed-doubles depth creating parity. Late roster confirmations, fatigue from the five-day double-elimination format, or standout performances in mixed or men's doubles could shift sentiment by altering playoff seeding implications.











