| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Both Teams To Score | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether both Brighton and Sunderland will score in the named fixture. It matters to traders who want to express a view on the match’s scoring balance rather than which side will win.
Brighton and Sunderland are clubs with different recent league contexts, so meetings between them can reflect contrasts in squad depth, tempo and tactical approach. Their head-to-head history is limited compared with intra-league rivalries, so recent form, competition type (league, cup, friendly) and squad rotation often matter more than long-term rivalry patterns.
Market prices reflect the aggregated expectations of participants about whether both teams will score and will move as news, lineups or in-game events arrive. Use prices as a real‑time indicator of sentiment, while tracking injury reports, starting XIs and match context for fundamentals.
It means the outcome depends only on whether Brighton score at least one goal and Sunderland score at least one goal during the match; the result or margin does not matter.
The event listing shows a closing time of TBD; the platform (KALSHI) sets and updates the official close. Check the event page on KALSHI for the confirmed closing timestamp and any last‑minute changes.
Primary influencers are each side’s strike options and creative midfielders who create chances, plus wing-backs or wide attackers who supply crosses. Conversely, central defenders and the goalkeeper strongly affect the conceded-goal risk, so absences there matter for this market.
Monitor pre-match reports and confirmed starting XIs: missing a main scorer or a key centre-back can materially change goal probabilities. Also note competition context—managers may rotate in cup ties or protect players in congested schedules, which affects scoring risk.
In-game events shift scoring dynamics: a red card usually reduces the affected team’s attacking potential and can alter defensive vulnerability; a penalty creates an immediate high-probability scoring chance for the awarded side; attacking substitutions or a change to a more defensive formation will also influence the likelihood that both teams score.