| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Both Teams To Score | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether both Aston Villa and Manchester United will score at least one goal in their upcoming match. It matters because BTTS markets capture whether a game will be open and attacking or dominated by one side’s defense, and they react quickly to team news and in-game developments.
Aston Villa at Manchester United is a high-profile fixture in English football, typically influenced by venue (Old Trafford when United host), recent form, and squad availability. Historical meetings between these clubs have produced a mix of tight defensive contests and high-scoring games, so pre-match context and last-minute news often shift expectations.
Market prices reflect the collective view of whether both teams will score and will move as new information (lineups, injuries, weather) becomes available. Use the market as a dynamic signal of how participants update their expectations in response to news rather than a fixed prediction.
The event page currently lists the market closing time as TBD. On many platforms BTTS markets close at or immediately before kickoff, but confirm the exact close time on the KALSHI event page for this matchup.
Late confirmation that a team’s leading striker or creative midfielder is unavailable, or that a starting goalkeeper or center‑back is missing, typically causes noticeable price movement because those changes materially affect both teams’ scoring prospects.
Recent head‑to‑head trends — whether meetings tend to feature goals at both ends or low scores — are one input among many; they provide context but can be outweighed by current form, injuries, and tactical setups for the specific match.
Settlement follows the platform’s event rules. Many markets require a completed match within regulation time to determine BTTS; if the fixture is abandoned or altered the market may be voided or resolved according to KALSHI’s stated policies, so check the event rules for this listing.
Monitor each side’s primary strikers and creative midfielders (who generate chances), plus any news on starting goalkeepers or central defenders. Examples to watch for this fixture include the clubs’ leading forwards and their chief playmakers and defensive anchors, since their presence or absence directly affects both teams’ ability to score or keep a clean sheet.