| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Both Teams To Score | 95% | 54¢ | 56¢ | — | $2K | Trade → |
This market asks whether both Frankfurt and St. Pauli will score at least one goal in their match. It matters because the outcome captures expectations about each side's attacking threat and defensive vulnerability in a single, easy-to-understand bet.
The fixture pairs two teams with different profiles — one side that will look to create chances and another that can be strong at home and provoke open exchanges. Seasonal form, recent goal patterns, and squad availability all shape how likely both sides are to find the net. Market interest and in-play events before kickoff can rapidly change the market view.
Market prices are a real-time summary of trader views about the likelihood of both teams scoring; they move as news about lineups, injuries, and match conditions arrives. Use prices to compare your reading of match factors against the market consensus rather than as a definitive forecast.
The outcome is determined by whether both teams register at least one goal in the match as reflected in the official final score used by the platform; most markets count goals scored during regular time including stoppage time and exclude goals only from penalty shootouts or separate extra-time periods if applicable.
The closing time is listed as TBD for this market; typically these markets close before kickoff and settle after the match concludes when the official result is published by the competition and the trading platform. Check the platform’s event page for the exact closing and settlement policy.
Key influences are the availability of each side’s primary strikers and creative playmakers, the presence or absence of defensive leaders or the first-choice goalkeeper, and any late tactical substitutions; suspension or injury to those personnel materially affects the likelihood both sides will score.
Head-to-head results can reveal tendencies — for example, whether past meetings produced goals at both ends — but they are a small sample and should be combined with current-season form, squad changes, and context (home/away, competition) rather than relied on alone.
Yes — own goals and penalties that stand are included in the official match score and therefore count toward 'both teams to score.' VAR-confirmed decisions that change the official score also count, and red cards can indirectly affect the outcome by altering game dynamics; final settlement follows the competition’s official scoreline.