| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market concerns whether at least one run will be scored during the first inning of the Cleveland vs Seattle game; first-inning scoring can set early momentum and affect in-play betting and managerial decisions.
Cleveland and Seattle each enter games with changing rotations and lineups throughout the season, so the announced starters and batting orders for the scheduled matchup are central context. Ballpark factors, time of day, and recent team form also shape first-inning scoring tendencies, while small-sample head-to-head history is only one input among many.
Market odds aggregate traders' expectations about first-inning scoring given the available pregame information and update as new facts (pitchers, lineups, weather) emerge. Use those movements to gauge how the market values different factors, not as a static forecast.
A first inning run is any official run scored during the first inning (either the top or bottom) as recorded in the official game score; the method of scoring (hits, walks, errors, wild pitches, etc.) does not change whether a run counts.
Settlement follows the exchange's official rules; typically if the scheduled game does not start or the first inning is not completed, the market may be voided or paused pending the exchange's determination—check the platform's resolution policy for final guidance.
Late updates that commonly move the market include the official starting pitchers, last-minute lineup changes or scratches, weather or wind advisories, and bullpen availability notes from club announcements.
Yes; any run that is officially recorded in the first inning counts for the purpose of this market regardless of whether it is later ruled earned or unearned.
Head-to-head history can provide context, but give greater weight to the specific matchup details for this game—today's starting pitchers, confirmed lineups, venue, and current form—because roster and rotation changes make older small-sample results less predictive.