| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Panama | 0% | 6¢ | 77¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Colombia | 0% | 4¢ | 77¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Tie | 0% | 1¢ | 61¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market tracks which side is leading at the conclusion of the first five innings of the Colombia vs Panama game; it matters for traders who want to focus on early-game dynamics rather than the final result.
Colombia and Panama have competitive baseball programs in the Americas and often face each other in regional qualifiers and international tournaments; those matchups can be tightly contested, especially early when starting pitchers and lineup matchups dominate. Early-inning outcomes tend to be more volatile than full-game results because a single inning or pitching change can swing the immediate score.
Market prices reflect collective expectations about the state of the game after five innings and update as new information (starter announcements, weather, lineup changes) arrives. Treat prices as real‑time summaries of available information, not guarantees of final outcomes.
The market resolves based on the official scoreboard at the conclusion of the fifth inning: whichever team is leading at that point (or a tie) determines the outcome. If the governing exchange has specific rules about suspended or incomplete games, follow those published resolution rules.
Resolution is based on the official score at the conclusion of the fifth inning as recorded by the game authority; typical baseball practice is to use the scoreboard at that exact juncture rather than hypothetical later events. Check the exchange’s rules for any edge cases.
Very important: starters set the tempo for the first five innings. Their recent workload, effectiveness against the opposition’s lineup, and expected durability through five innings are primary drivers of early-game scoring and therefore directly influence this market.
No. Only runs recorded on the official scoreboard at the conclusion of the fifth inning are relevant to this market; runs in later innings do not change the first-five-innings outcome.
Prioritize confirmed starting pitchers and their recent workloads, official lineup cards (including late scratches), weather and wind forecasts for the ballpark, and any last-minute injury or manager comments about bullpen usage. Those items most directly affect run production and pitching through five innings.