| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Both Teams To Score | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This prediction market asks whether both Hoffenheim and Leipzig will score at least one goal during their match. It matters because 'Both Teams to Score' captures how open or defensive a game is expected to be and is a common way to express expectations about match entertainment and attacking balance.
Hoffenheim and Leipzig are top‑flight German clubs whose meetings have produced a variety of scorelines over the years; Leipzig are often associated with high pressing and quick transitions while Hoffenheim can vary between possession play and counterattacking. Form, squad changes, and managerial tactics across a season influence how likely both sides are to find the net in any given fixture.
Market prices reflect the aggregated view of traders about the likelihood that both teams will score; they move as new information arrives (lineups, injuries, weather, etc.). Treat prices as a live consensus signal, not a fixed forecast—expect them to change up to market close and during in‑play trading if available.
The market settles based on the official match score as recorded by the competition organiser: the outcome is 'Yes' if both Hoffenheim and Leipzig have scored at least one goal in the match period that the market specifies, otherwise 'No'.
Market close and settlement timing are set by the platform for this specific event (listed as TBD here); resolution typically occurs after the match is completed and the competition's official full‑time score is confirmed, including stoppage time of each half where applicable.
For regular league fixtures, only goals scored during regulation time (including stoppage time) are normally counted; extra time and penalty shoot‑outs are excluded unless the market explicitly states otherwise—official competition rules determine what counts for settlement.
Yes: any goal that is included in the official match score—whether an own goal or a goal confirmed after VAR review—counts toward whether each team has scored, provided it falls within the match period specified by the market.
Starting lineup news is highly relevant: the absence of primary scorers or the loss of defensive starters can materially change the likelihood that one or both teams score. Late updates to formations or confirmed injuries often trigger market movement and are important to monitor up to kickoff.