| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether at least one run will be scored in the first inning of the Colorado vs Toronto game. It matters for traders who want to express views on very short‑term baseball outcomes tied to starting pitchers, lineups, and game conditions.
Colorado vs Toronto typically refers to an MLB matchup between the Colorado Rockies and the Toronto Blue Jays; first‑inning scoring depends heavily on the announced starting pitchers, the top of each batting order, and location-specific factors like ballpark and weather. Historical patterns (team tendencies to score early or starters who allow early runs) can inform expectations, but lineup changes, late scratches, and weather often move the outlook on game day.
Market odds aggregate participant views about whether a run will be scored in the first inning and will move as new information arrives (lineups, starting pitchers, weather). Treat prices as a snapshot of current market sentiment rather than a certainty about the game outcome.
A 'first inning run' generally means any run recorded in the official first inning (top or bottom) on the official box score. That includes runs scored via hits, walks, errors, wild pitches, or other plays so long as the official scoring assigns the run during the first inning. Check the market page for the platform's exact settlement definition.
Resolution policies vary by platform. Many markets use the official league box score once the game is completed or follow a stated rule for suspended/postponed games. Consult the event's settlement rules on the market page for the definitive policy.
Yes—if the official scorer lists the runs as occurring in the first inning on the final or updated official box score, they typically count. Runs added or removed after official review or official scorer adjustments can affect settlement according to the platform's rules.
Key items: the announced starting pitchers and any late pitching changes, the posted batting lineups (especially top three hitters), injury updates or scratches, and final weather/wind reports. Any late changes to those items are the most likely to move the market.
Most impact comes from lineup releases (typically 30–60 minutes before first pitch), last‑minute starter changes (which can occur up to game time), and late weather/wind updates. Monitor those windows closely for the largest information-driven moves.