| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Both Teams To Score | 40% | 40¢ | 44¢ | — | $16 | Trade → |
This market asks whether both Pisa and Juventus will score at least one goal in their matchup; it matters because the outcome captures how participants expect the match balance between attack and defense to play out.
Pisa and Juventus are Italian clubs that may meet in league or cup competition; Juventus is traditionally a top-tier side while Pisa is a smaller club, so meetings can reflect mismatches or tactical caution. Frequency and historical context of their meetings depend on competition (league vs. cup) and season placement, and factors like squad rotation, injuries, and fixture congestion shape scoring patterns.
Market prices aggregate traders' views about whether both teams will score and update as new information arrives; interpret prices as a real-time summary of market sentiment and information, not a guaranteed prediction.
It generally means each side must score at least one goal during the match period used for resolution; own goals that appear on the official match report count for the scoring team, and the official competition report is used to determine the outcome.
Resolution timing depends on the market's specific rules but typically uses the official end of the match period specified by the event (for league fixtures this is the end of regular time); check the market's resolution rules if the match could go to extra time or be abandoned.
Look at recent meetings (if any), whether those matches were high- or low-scoring, and whether one side consistently broke down the other's defense; sparse historical meetings reduce the weight of head-to-heads and increase the importance of current form and squad makeup.
Key attacking starters (strikers, creative midfielders) and primary defenders or the goalkeeper matter most; suspensions, late injuries, or confirmed rotations that remove goal threats or defensive anchors can materially change the likelihood of both teams scoring.
An early goal changing tactics, a red card, major injury to a key player, a penalty awarded and converted or missed, and sudden weather or pitch issues can all rapidly shift scoring dynamics and therefore the market outcome.