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Sports OPEN

Colorado vs Toronto: First Inning Run

📊 $0 traded 🏦 Source: Kalshi
Total Volume
$0
Open Interest
0
Active Markets
1
Markets
1

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About This Market

This market asks whether at least one run will be scored during the first inning of the Colorado vs Toronto game. First-inning scoring is a high-leverage micro-market because it combines pitcher matchup, lineup construction, and immediate game conditions.

The event centers on a single MLB game between Colorado and Toronto; which team is home and the official start time determine ballpark and weather context. Historical tendencies (team offense in early innings, starter first-inning splits) and late changes to starting pitchers or lineups are the main background drivers that traders watch.

Market prices reflect the collective expectation that at least one run will appear on the official scoreboard during inning one; prices move in response to new, game-specific information such as weather, announced lineups, and scratches.

Key Factors

Frequently Asked Questions

How is a 'First Inning Run' defined for this market?

Any run that is officially recorded on the scoreboard during the first inning (top or bottom) counts; runs are judged by the official game score at the time the first inning is completed.

When will this market be settled relative to the game timeline?

Settlement occurs after the first inning is completed and official scoring is available; if the game is delayed or suspended before the inning is finished, settlement will follow the exchange's rules (usually waiting for completion or voiding if the game is not resumed).

Do announced starting lineups or last-minute pitcher changes affect the market?

Yes—announced lineups and any pregame pitcher changes materially affect expectations because they alter matchups, handedness, and the likelihood of early scoring, so markets often move on that information.

What kinds of scoring plays in the first inning count (e.g., wild pitches, errors, sacrifice flies)?

All runs that appear on the official first-inning scoreboard count, including runs on hits, sacrifices, wild pitches, passed balls, balks, and errors; official scoring and subsequent review determine the final record used for settlement.

What happens if the game is postponed, canceled, or never reaches the end of the first inning?

If the first inning is not completed, the market will be resolved according to the exchange's rules—typically waiting for the game to be resumed or voiding trades if the game is cancelled per the platform's settlement policy.

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