| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Both Teams To Score | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether both Nottingham (the away team) and Tottenham (the home team) will score at least one goal during their matchup. It matters because 'both teams to score' markets capture expectations about attacking effectiveness and defensive vulnerability for a specific fixture.
Nottingham and Tottenham have contrasting profiles: Tottenham are typically positioned as a higher-possession, attack-oriented side, while Nottingham often set up to be compact and exploit transitions. Historical meetings and seasonal form can produce either low-scoring, defensive matches or open games with chances at both ends, so context around lineups and match stakes is important.
Market prices represent the collective view of whether both teams will score; price movement reflects new information such as confirmed lineups, injuries, weather, and in-play events. Use changes in price to understand how traders are updating expectations as the match approaches and unfolds.
Resolution is based on the official final score at the end of regulation time (including stoppage time) as recorded by the competition’s official source; if each team has scored at least one goal during that period the market is resolved as 'both teams scored'.
The market's close time is listed as TBD; typically the platform will set a closing time before kick-off or at kick-off and publish it on the event page—check the market header or official announcements for the exact close time.
Key items are confirmed starting forwards/strikers, any late absences for primary goal scorers, the selected goalkeeper for each side, and announcements of major tactical changes (e.g., a planned defensive setup or a rotated attack), since these directly affect goal probabilities.
Stoppage time (added on by the referee at the end of each half) is typically included in the match result used for resolution; extra time and penalty shootouts are generally excluded unless the market rules explicitly state otherwise—check the market’s resolution rules for confirmation.
An early goal by either side often lowers the probability that both will score if the other team appears defensive, while an early red card, injury to a striker, or attacking substitution can increase chances; traders react quickly to these match-specific developments, moving the market accordingly.