| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Both Teams To Score | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether both Manchester City and Chelsea will score at least one goal in their match. It matters because BTTS-style outcomes isolate scoring interaction between the two teams and are sensitive to lineup and tactical changes that bettors and traders watch closely.
Manchester City and Chelsea are top‑level English clubs with contrasting recent styles: City typically control possession and create high-quality chances, while Chelsea often mix counterattacking threats with tactical rotations. Head‑to‑head history and each club’s current form, injuries, and competition priorities (league, cup, European fixtures) provide useful context for this single-match market.
Market prices are the crowd’s evolving consensus about whether both sides will score; price moves reflect new information such as confirmed lineups, injuries, weather, or late tactical news. Use prices together with publicly available match facts rather than as fixed truth, since they update as events unfold.
Close time is listed as TBD on the event; typically such markets close shortly before kick‑off. Check the market page for the definitive close time as it is posted or updated by the platform.
Yes — an official own goal is recorded as a goal for the opposing team, so it counts toward the BTTS outcome. Only officially recorded goals in the match record are considered.
Most BTTS markets resolve based on regulation time (90 minutes plus stoppage) and exclude extra time and penalty shootouts; however, always confirm the market’s specific settlement rules on the event page.
If the fixture is not completed as scheduled, the market will follow the platform’s event‑resolution policy — this can include delaying settlement, voiding the market, or applying a rescheduled match result. Consult the official event rules and announcements for the final decision.
These developments materially affect the BTTS outlook and typically move market prices quickly. Monitor verified team announcements and in‑match events; traders often adjust positions based on whether attacking or defensive personnel change close to kick‑off or during the game.