| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stade Rennais | 0% | 27¢ | 33¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Nice | 0% | 24¢ | 31¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Tie | 0% | 34¢ | 44¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which side will be leading at the end of the first half in the Ligue 1 match between Nice and Stade Rennais — Nice win at half, Stade Rennais win at half, or a Draw at half. It matters because first-half results reflect early tactics, starting lineups, and match tempo that traders can act on.
Nice and Stade Rennais are established teams in France's top division with differing tactical tendencies that often shape the opening 45 minutes: one side may prioritize early pressure while the other prefers to build into the game. Match-specific factors such as squad rotation, recent form, and where the game is played influence how the first half unfolds and are typically more informative than long-term season averages.
Market prices are a dynamic summary of participant expectations and react to new information (lineups, injuries, weather, etc.); interpret them as a crowd signal rather than a certainty and be prepared for movement as game-time information arrives.
The market resolves to one of three outcomes: Nice leading at halftime, Stade Rennais leading at halftime, or a Draw at halftime (any equal scoreline at the halftime whistle).
Resolution is based on the official score at the end of the first half as recorded by the match officials (including any stoppage time before the halftime whistle); if the match does not reach halftime or is abandoned, the market will be resolved according to the platform's published contingency rules, so check the exchange for those specifics.
Confirmed late lineup changes or pre-match injuries can materially shift expectations because they alter attacking or defensive balance; markets typically react quickly to such news. Low traded volume (currently reported as zero) implies limited liquidity, so prices can swing more on small trades and it may be harder to execute large positions without moving the market.
Yes — any goal scored before the referee blows the halftime whistle, including first-half stoppage time, counts toward the halftime score used for resolution.
Use head-to-head and recent first-half performance as contextual inputs — look for patterns such as which team tends to start fast, how often either side concedes early, and whether managers rotate heavily for this fixture — but weigh those trends against current match-day information like lineup changes, injuries, and venue.