| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Both Teams To Score | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether both D.C. United and Chicago Fire will score at least one goal in their match. It matters because BTTS markets reflect game flow and can be influenced by tactics, injuries, and weather, offering a focused way to trade scoring dynamics.
D.C. United and Chicago Fire are MLS clubs with different historical styles and head-to-head records; some seasons one or both teams have tended to produce higher-scoring games, while other periods have seen tighter, low-scoring matches. Team lineups, coaching approaches, and season schedule (congested fixtures, travel) all shape the scoring profile for any given meeting.
Market prices represent the consensus view of traders about the likelihood of both teams scoring and move as new information arrives. Low liquidity or late-breaking match news can produce rapid price swings, so interpret changes as reactions to information rather than fixed predictions.
The market resolves based on the official final score of the scheduled match once the match has completed its regulation time (including stoppage/injury time). If the fixture is postponed, rescheduled, or otherwise altered, resolution follows the platform’s announced rules for that situation.
A winning outcome requires at least one goal credited to each team in the official match score at the end of regulation time (including stoppage time). Goals scored only in penalty shootouts or in separate, non-regulation formats do not count.
Watch for confirmed starting forwards, attacking midfielders, and the starting goalkeepers for both teams, plus any announced injuries or suspensions. Late formation changes, rest decisions, or players listed as doubtful in the official matchday report are especially relevant.
Zero or very low traded volume indicates limited liquidity; quoted prices may reflect few or no executed trades and can be volatile if a single order is placed. Treat early or low-volume price moves cautiously and corroborate with external match information.
Confirmed starting XIs, late injuries or substitutions at kickoff, weather or field-condition updates, and early match events (an early goal or a red card) typically trigger the largest immediate price reactions.