| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Navy 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 — Navy or Wake Forest — will be the first to reach 10 points in their matchup. It matters because early scoring patterns often reflect game tempo, matchup advantages, and can signal how the game is likely to unfold.
Navy and Wake Forest come from different offensive traditions: Navy typically emphasizes a run-first, clock-controlling offense, while Wake Forest often fields a more balanced or tempo-oriented attack depending on the sport and coaching staff. Historical meetings, roster changes, and the specific context of this contest (home/away, injuries, weather) shape early-game scoring dynamics and therefore this market.
Market prices represent the collective expectation about which team will reach 10 points first, aggregating public information like starting lineups, play style, and situational advantages. Use the market as a real-time signal rather than a definitive prediction — it updates as new information (injuries, weather, lineup changes) becomes available.
The market resolves when one team is credited with at least 10 points on the official game scoreboard; the market close time is listed as TBD and final resolution follows the platform’s published rules.
All points reflected on the official scoreboard count toward the 10-point threshold — this includes touchdowns, field goals, safeties, extra points, and any other points awarded by the game’s official scorers.
Simultaneous scoring outcomes are rare; resolution follows the platform’s tie or cancellation policy. Check KALSHI’s official market resolution rules for the definitive procedure in such cases.
Watch the opening possession result, any early turnovers or special-teams scores, injury reports for starting skill-position players, and weather or surface conditions declared before kickoff — each can materially shift expectations about who reaches 10 first.
Key influences are the starting quarterbacks and primary ball-carriers/receivers (who produce sustained drives), the kicker (for early field goals), and special-teams returners or coverage units (who can produce sudden points or short fields).