| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Both Teams To Score | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether both Portland and Houston will score at least one goal in their upcoming match. It matters because outcome-based goal markets capture how balanced each side’s attack and defense are and react quickly to lineup, weather, and tactical news.
Portland and Houston meet as clubs with differing recent histories, rosters, and tactical approaches; their head-to-head results and current-season form provide useful context for goal expectations. Match setting (regular season vs. cup), travel, and roster rotation can all shift scoring dynamics on the day.
Market odds represent the aggregated view of traders about the likelihood that both teams will score; moves in the market often reflect new, event-specific information such as starting lineups, injuries, or late weather updates.
Both teams must score at least one goal within the match time window specified by the market (typically regulation time plus stoppage). Own goals count toward the opponent’s total; penalty shootout goals are normally excluded unless the market explicitly states otherwise—always check the market rules for the official settlement definition.
The close time is set by the platform and is shown on the market page; many markets close at or just before kickoff to prevent trading on in-play information, but this specific market’s close time is listed as TBD—consult the market page for the official closing timestamp.
Settlement follows the platform’s contingency rules: markets are often voided if the match is not completed within a specified window, or they may be settled based on the official match report; check the market’s terms for the exact policy covering postponements, abandonments, and rescheduling.
Late absences of primary goal scorers, playmakers, or the starting goalkeeper are highly influential, as are defensive suspensions or major tactical rotations. Managers resting starters or substituting attacking personnel for defensive players also materially change expected scoring dynamics.
Head-to-head and recent goal trends are useful context—e.g., if past meetings tended to be high- or low-scoring—but they are a limited sample and should be combined with current-season form, injuries, lineup news, and match context before drawing conclusions.