| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Both Teams To Score | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This prediction market asks whether both Parma Calcio and Lazio will score at least one goal in their upcoming match. It matters because it isolates attacking/defensive dynamics without requiring a specific final score.
Parma and Lazio meet in a fixture shaped by their recent domestic form, tactical approaches, and squad availability; matches between teams with contrasting styles can be prone to goals at both ends. Historical Serie A and cup meetings provide context but current-season injuries, transfers, and coaching changes are often more determinative for a single fixture.
Market odds express the collective view of traders about the likelihood of both teams scoring and update as new information arrives. Treat odds as a real-time sentiment indicator that can shift with lineup news, weather, or in-game events.
It means each team must score at least one goal during the match for the market to resolve as 'Yes.' If either side fails to score, the market resolves as 'No.' Settlement follows the competition's official result for regular time.
Settlement normally follows the official outcome of the match as played. If the fixture is postponed, most platforms wait for the rescheduled match to be played; if a match is abandoned without a completed result, the platform’s rules determine whether the market is voided or settled.
Absences or returns of each team’s main goalscorers and creative midfielders materially affect scoring chances, as do changes to starting goalkeepers or central defenders. Suspensions, late injuries, or unexpected tactical changes announced in the lineup are key drivers of market movement.
Head-to-head results can highlight patterns (e.g., whether past meetings tended to be open or defensive) but should be weighed alongside current-season form, managerial changes, and squad availability, which typically have greater bearing on a single match.
In-play, red cards and injuries will shift live market prices because they change the probability each team will score. For settlement, only the official final score in regular time matters; in-play events do not alter settlement rules but do affect trading opportunities before the final whistle.