| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Both Teams To Score | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether both Austin and Miami will score at least one goal in their head-to-head match. It matters because the outcome summarizes whether the game will be competitive offensively and is commonly used for hedging and in-game strategies.
Austin and Miami are professional clubs whose tactical setups, roster choices, and travel schedules shape how many goals each side concedes and scores. Historical scoring trends between the clubs and across recent seasons provide background, but the decisive information for this single-game market is current form, lineup availability, and match-day conditions. The market stays relevant to traders because those inputs often change up to kickoff.
Market prices reflect traders’ aggregated expectations about both teams scoring; price movement encodes new information such as confirmed lineups, injuries, or weather. Use shifts in the market together with match news to understand how expectations change over time.
The outcome is satisfied if both teams are credited with at least one official goal during the match period used for settlement. Check the market description for the specific settlement window (e.g., regulation plus stoppage time).
Goals scored in regular time (including stoppage) typically count; penalty shootout goals normally do not. If the competition may include extra time, the market description will specify whether those goals are included for settlement.
Yes — an own goal that is officially recorded as a goal for the opposing team counts toward that team’s score and therefore toward the both-teams-to-score outcome.
Settlement in those situations depends on the platform’s rules: markets are commonly voided and funds returned, or settlement may wait for a rescheduled fixture. Refer to the event’s trading terms for the specific policy.
Confirmed starting lineups, late injuries or suspensions (especially to forwards or goalkeepers), tactical announcements (e.g., defensive versus attacking setups), adverse weather reports, and last-minute travel or fitness concerns are the main news items that typically shift market expectations.