| 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 during the first inning of the Detroit vs San Diego game. First-inning scoring can influence momentum and in-play strategies, so it attracts interest from bettors and analysts.
Markets focused on first-inning runs highlight the very start of a game, where pitcher warmup, lineup construction, and situational matchups matter most. Detroit and San Diego are MLB franchises with differing offensive profiles; past matchups provide context but each game's outcome depends on the specific starters, lineups, and conditions on game day.
Prediction market odds represent the collective market view about whether a run will be scored in the first inning, updated as new information becomes available. Use those odds as a real-time synthesis of public information, not as a guarantee of outcome.
The market resolves based on whether any run is officially scored during the first inning of the scheduled game. A 'first inning run' is any run recorded on the official scorebook during the first inning before the third out, regardless of whether it is ruled earned or unearned.
Yes. A run scored by either team in the first inning (top or bottom half) qualifies for the market outcome.
Platform-specific rules determine treatment of postponements. Commonly, markets referencing a specific scheduled contest are voided if the game is not played on the scheduled date, or they are carried over only if the platform states so — check the event page for the platform's resolution policy.
Significant impact: a last-minute starter swap, bullpen opener, or major lineup change alters early-run probabilities because those moves change matchup dynamics and the expected quality of the first-inning at-bats. Markets typically react quickly to those announcements.
Yes. Any run that is officially recorded during the first inning counts toward the outcome, including runs scored after errors, wild pitches, passed balls, or other non-standard plays, as reflected on the official scoring.