| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Great Britain | 48% | 2¢ | 79¢ | — | $9 | Trade → |
| Tie | 0% | 1¢ | 65¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Brazil | 0% | 1¢ | 78¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which side will be leading, or whether the score will be tied, at the end of the first five innings of the Brazil vs Great Britain game. It matters because the first five innings provide an early, high-leverage snapshot of who has momentum in the contest.
The 'first five innings' market isolates early-game performance rather than final outcome, which is useful in sports with defined inning structures where pitching and lineup deployment change over the game. Brazil and Great Britain bring different development programs and playing styles that can influence scoring pace; tournament context (friendly, qualifier, or multi-sport event) and stakes often shape managerial decisions in the early innings. Weather, venue, and travel also commonly affect early-game dynamics.
Market prices reflect the collective judgement of traders about which of the three outcomes is most likely after five innings and move as new information (lineups, starters, weather) arrives; use them as a real-time signal of market sentiment, not as guarantees of outcome.
They represent (1) Brazil leading after five completed innings, (2) Great Britain leading after five completed innings, and (3) the score being tied after five completed innings.
Resolution occurs based on the official game report once the first five innings are completed; exact settlement timing depends on the listed market rules and the event operator's official score confirmation.
If the first five innings are not completed due to suspension, abandonment, or curtailment, the market will follow the event operator's published ruling—common approaches are to void the market or to use the last official score at the point of suspension depending on the operator's rules.
Announcements of starting/opening pitchers, official batting lineups, late scratches or travel issues, and significant weather updates are the most likely to change market pricing.
Historical trends can inform expectations for early scoring patterns and managerial tendencies, but they should be combined with current matchup details—starter quality, lineup changes, and situational context—to assess likely first-five dynamics.