| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2+ Grand Slam | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether a specified professional baseball game will feature two or more grand slams. It matters because back-to-back or multiple grand slams in a single game are rare, creating a high-impact, event-driven wager for sports traders.
A grand slam occurs when a batter hits a home run with the bases loaded, which requires both offensive production and opportunities to load the bases. Multiple grand slams in one game have occurred only occasionally in professional baseball history, making this outcome unusual and newsworthy when it happens. The market's settlement depends on the exact game and timing specified in the contract, which is currently listed as closing TBD.
Market prices reflect the crowd's aggregated view of how likely two or more grand slams are in the designated game and will move as information (lineups, weather, pitcher changes) arrives. To interpret movement, compare it against incoming game-specific news rather than broad season trends.
A grand slam is a home run hit with the bases loaded that scores four runs; settlement will rely on the official league box score and play-by-play for the designated game as specified in the contract.
No — the contract specifies the total number of grand slams in the game regardless of which team hit them; two or more by any combination of teams meets the condition.
Typically yes — grand slams in extra innings count unless the market rules explicitly limit play to regulation innings; check the contract's settlement rules to confirm.
Settlement is based on the official game records recognized by the market operator, commonly the league's official box score and play-by-play; the market page or rulebook names the authoritative source.
The market currently lists its close as TBD; if the game is postponed or rescheduled, the market's specific settlement rules dictate whether it will wait for the rescheduled game, be voided, or follow an alternate resolution—check the market details for the operator's policy.