| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Both Teams To Score | 0% | 54¢ | 60¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether both Houston and New England will each record at least one score in their matchup. It matters because it isolates the interaction between the two teams' ability to produce points and is a common prop for bettors evaluating offensive versus defensive dynamics.
The matchup between these two clubs can produce widely different scorelines depending on quarterback play, defensive game plans, and venue conditions in New England. Historical head-to-heads and seasonal styles (e.g., conservative vs. high-tempo offenses) create context for expectations without fixing a single outcome.
Market prices aggregate participant beliefs about the likelihood that each team will score at least once; prices shift as information arrives (lineups, injuries, weather, etc.). Interpreting prices requires noting the contract's resolution rules, which define what counts as a score and whether extra time is included.
It means each team must register at least one official scoring event in the match (points in football, goals in soccer). The contract's description or exchange rules specify which scoring types and which periods of play count.
That depends on the market's resolution text. Some contracts count only regulation play while others include overtime; check the event description or KALSHI's rules for this specific listing.
Late injuries to quarterbacks or primary scorers typically move market prices because they change scoring expectations. For settlement, only the final official scoring outcome matters—injuries don't alter settlement unless the match is postponed or voided per exchange rules.
Resolution follows KALSHI's event policies: common approaches include voiding and refunding if the game is not played within a defined window, or using the result if the game is completed later. Check the event page for the specific cutoff and resolution policy.
Monitor each team's recent points-per-game, red‑zone efficiency, turnover rate, sacks/pressure allowed, and frequency of shutouts. Also track special teams scoring and weather reports for New England ahead of kickoff.