| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether there will be a run scored during the first inning of the Boston vs Houston game. It matters for traders who want to express views on immediate-game scoring dynamics and to hedge or speculate on starting pitching and early lineup performance.
Boston and Houston bring distinct offensive approaches, ballpark environments, and pitching staffs that shape early-inning scoring expectations. Historical tendencies (how each team starts games), the announced starting pitchers, and recent lineup health all provide useful context for the first inning specifically. Because the market resolves on a short timescale, last-minute changes and in-game conditions can be decisive.
Market odds reflect the aggregated beliefs of participants about whether a run will be scored in the first inning; they update as new information arrives (lineups, weather, pitcher changes) and are not guarantees. Interpret prices as a dynamic indicator of market sentiment about immediate-game scoring rather than a fixed prediction.
This specific market's close time is listed on the market page; many first-inning markets close at or immediately before first pitch, but because the close here is marked TBD you should check the market page or announcements for the exact cutoff.
Resolution is based on official MLB scoring for the first inning—any run credited during the top or bottom of the first inning (by either team) counts, unless the market page specifies a different resolution rule.
A late change to the starter typically shifts market sentiment because different pitchers bring different early-inning profiles; traders will react and prices may move up to the market close, so monitor the market and announcements closely before first pitch.
Yes—wind direction, temperature, and humidity can materially influence fly-ball carry and scoring in the earliest innings, and Boston vs Houston ballpark characteristics (dimensions, altitude) also affect how likely early runs are.
Resolution follows the market's stated rules and official game status; typically, runs are counted based on official MLB scoring at the time the inning is completed or as defined by the market rules, so consult the market's resolution policy for interruptions.