| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether there will be at least one run scored during the first inning of the Colorado vs Miami game. It matters because the first inning is a short, high-leverage window where starting pitchers, lineup construction, and environment interact to produce outs or early scoring that bettors trade on.
This matchup’s opening inning outcome depends on matchup-specific context: the announced starting pitchers and their recent forms, the published lineups and where top-of-order hitters bat, and the game location and weather. Historical tendencies—such as whether these teams have been involved in high- or low-scoring games—provide background, but the immediate pregame information (pitcher, lineup, stadium, conditions) typically drives markets for a single-inning proposition.
Market prices reflect the market’s collective view based on available pregame information (starters, lineups, weather, ballpark). Prices move as new information arrives; interpret them as a snapshot of crowd expectations rather than a fixed prediction.
This market resolves based on the official play of the first inning as recorded by the game’s official scorer: resolution occurs after the top and bottom of the first inning are completed, per the exchange’s stated rules. If the game has special circumstances (suspension, postponement), the exchange’s settlement rules for incomplete games apply.
Any run that appears on the official scoreboard and in the official box score as scored during the first inning counts, regardless of whether it is earned or unearned; the market follows the league’s official scoring and play-by-play.
If the game does not reach an official completion of the first inning, the market will follow the exchange’s rules for suspended or cancelled events—typically voiding or settling per published resolution policies—so check the event page or rulebook for that procedure.
Any announced lineup or starter change before the market closes (or before the game starts) is information traders will price in; such changes can materially alter expectations for first-inning scoring, so markets often move quickly when teams release updated lineups or pitching changes.
Yes—runs that score on plays recorded in the official play-by-play for the first inning, including those resulting from errors, balks, wild pitches, or passed balls, count toward the market outcome under standard official scoring.