| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Illinois St. scores 10 points first | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Wake Forest scores 10 points first | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team—Illinois St. or Wake Forest—will be the first to reach 10 points in their scheduled game. It matters because early scoring patterns and lineup decisions often determine which side hits that threshold first.
Wake Forest typically competes in a Power‑Five conference while Illinois State is from a mid‑major program, so differences in depth, tempo, and matchup level can influence early scoring dynamics. Head‑to‑head meetings between these programs may be infrequent, so recent season form, current rosters, and coaching tendencies are more useful than long‑ago results. Check starting lineups, injury reports, and any last‑minute changes that affect primary scorers or special teams.
Market prices reflect the aggregate view of traders about which team will reach 10 points first and update as new information (starters, injuries, weather, in‑game events) arrives. Use market movement as a real‑time signal of how participants value early scoring likelihood, not as a static prediction.
Resolution occurs when one team is credited with its 10th official point during the regulated game period; check the market page for the exchange’s specific settlement rules and any notes about pregame or delayed starts.
Overtime scoring may or may not count depending on the market’s stated rules — many markets include overtime in resolution but some exclude it; verify the settlement terms on the event page before trading.
Simultaneous scoring incidents are typically governed by the market’s tie or void rules; some platforms declare a tie and refund unsettled contracts, while others apply a specific tie‑breaker; consult the event’s official rules for the final policy.
Monitor the teams’ projected starters and primary offensive weapons — the lead scorer or starting quarterback and any designated return specialists — plus any players listed as questionable; official pregame depth charts and team injury reports are the best sources for up‑to‑date names.
Markets typically react very quickly to official lineup releases, injury news, and in‑game developments because those directly change early scoring prospects; expect rapid price movement immediately after verified announcements.