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NYR Rangers at PHI Flyers: First Goal

📊 $3K traded 🏦 Source: Kalshi
Total Volume
$3K
Open Interest
2,920
Active Markets
31
Markets
31

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All Outcomes (31)
Outcome Probability Yes Bid Yes Ask 24h Change Volume
Travis Konecny 7%
$3K Trade →
Mika Zibanejad 9%
$100 Trade →
Sean Couturier 4%
$33 Trade →
Vincent Trocheck 6%
$25 Trade →
Matvei Michkov 7%
$22 Trade →
Conor Sheary 0%
$0 Trade →
Matthew Robertson 0%
$0 Trade →
Adam Fox 0%
$0 Trade →
Alexis Lafreniere 0%
$0 Trade →
Jonny Brodzinski 0%
$0 Trade →
Urho Vaakanainen 0%
$0 Trade →
Adam Edstrom 0%
$0 Trade →
Vladislav Gavrikov 0%
$0 Trade →
Braden Schneider 0%
$0 Trade →
Juuso Parssinen 0%
$0 Trade →
Will Borgen 0%
$0 Trade →
Noah Laba 0%
$0 Trade →
Will Cuylle 0%
$0 Trade →
Noah Juulsen 0%
$0 Trade →
Jamie Drysdale 0%
$0 Trade →
Christian Dvorak 0%
$0 Trade →
Travis Sanheim 0%
$0 Trade →
Cam York 0%
$0 Trade →
Carl Grundstrom 0%
$0 Trade →
Owen Tippett 0%
$0 Trade →
Noah Cates 0%
$0 Trade →
Rasmus Ristolainen 0%
$0 Trade →
Denver Barkey 0%
$0 Trade →
Trevor Zegras 0%
$0 Trade →
Nikita Grebenkin 0%
$0 Trade →
Gabe Perreault 0%
$0 Trade →

About This Market

This market asks which player (or outcome) will be credited with the first goal in the NYR Rangers at PHI Flyers game. It matters because first-goal outcomes frequently drive short-term trading and reflect early-game advantages that influence the rest of the matchup.

The Rangers–Flyers matchup is a divisional NHL game with a long history of physical, high-energy contests; both teams often prioritize aggressive forechecking and special-teams opportunities early in games. Rosters, line deployments, and starting goaltenders are the immediate context that shape expectations for who might score first, while in-game events like penalties and momentum swings drive the actual result.

Market prices reflect traders’ aggregated expectations about which player or outcome will be credited with the game’s first goal according to official NHL scoring. For resolution, outcomes are determined by the league’s official play-by-play and scorer rulings rather than subjective observer reports.

Key Factors

Frequently Asked Questions

How is 'first goal' defined and which goals count for this market?

The first goal is whatever the NHL's official game record lists as the first credited goal of the game. That includes goals scored in overtime if regulation ends scoreless (unless the market specifies otherwise). Shootout attempts are not recorded as goals in official scoring and therefore typically do not affect 'first goal' outcomes.

If an own goal or a deflection off a defender is the first puck in the net, which outcome wins?

Resolution follows the NHL’s official scorer: the goal is credited to the player the league assigns as the goal scorer. The market pays out to the outcome matching that credited player, not to the defender who caused the deflection.

When does trading in this market typically stop and how is the market resolved if the closing time is 'TBD'?

Markets for first-goal outcomes commonly lock around puck drop or at the moment the first goal is scored, but the exact closing behavior is set by the exchange. Resolution is based on the official NHL play-by-play and the exchange’s stated rules, so consult the market page for the platform’s specific close policy when it is posted.

Why are there so many outcomes (31) in this market?

A large outcome count reflects individual roster players listed as possible first-goal scorers plus one or more special outcomes (for example, 'no goal' or team-level options). That lets traders pick a specific player or alternative outcomes rather than only team-level possibilities.

Which pregame information should I watch to update my view on who might score first?

Key pregame items are confirmed starting lineups, power-play unit designations, the announced starting goaltenders, any last-minute scratches or injury reports, and announced defensive matchups. Early scratches or late-day lineup moves can materially change which players have the best chance to be credited with the first goal.

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