| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether there will be a run scored during the first inning of the New York Y vs San Francisco game. It matters because the first inning often reflects matchups between the scheduled starters and each team's top-of-order hitters, making it a focal point for early-game expectations.
New York Y vs San Francisco is evaluated in the context of each club's recent offensive form, the announced starting pitchers, and the ballpark where the game is played. Historical tendencies—such as how each team performs in early-inning scoring, typical starter durations, and head-to-head pitcher matchups—can shape what to expect for the first inning. Day/night game timing and late roster changes also influence early-game dynamics.
Market prices represent the crowd's aggregated expectation about whether at least one run will be scored in the first inning; they update as new, game-specific information (starting pitchers, lineups, weather) becomes available. Treat prices as a summary signal that changes when material information is revealed rather than as static forecasts.
This market resolves based on whether at least one run is scored during the official first inning of the New York Y vs San Francisco game (the top and bottom of the first inning as defined by the official scorer and platform rules). Check the market rules for the precise resolution authority.
The event currently shows a close time of TBD; markets like this often close at or immediately before first pitch, but you should monitor the platform for the official close time and any updates prior to the game.
Watch the announced starting pitchers for both teams and each club's top-of-the-order hitters (leadoff and second batter), since their on-base and contact profiles most directly influence first-inning scoring chances; also monitor any announced late scratches or pinch-hitter usage.
Wind direction and speed, air temperature, and the specific stadium's run environment affect how well balls carry and how easy it is to score early; cross-check forecasted conditions for game time and the park's historical first-inning scoring tendencies.
A late switch of the scheduled starter or an unexpected lineup change (especially affecting the top three hitters) can materially change expected first-inning scoring; such news typically causes rapid market updates as participants re-evaluate the matchup.