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Sports OPEN

Pro Baseball: No Hitter

📊 $0 traded 🏦 Source: Kalshi
Total Volume
$0
Open Interest
0
Active Markets
1
Markets
1

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Last Price
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Buy YES → Buy NO

Prices in cents (1¢ = 1%). Trade on Kalshi.

All Outcomes (1)
Outcome Probability Yes Bid Yes Ask 24h Change Volume
No Hitter 0%
$0 Trade →

About This Market

This market asks whether a professional baseball game will result in a no-hitter and matters because a no-hitter is a rare, high-impact game outcome that attracts attention from fans and traders. The market aggregates real-time information about pitchers, lineups, and game conditions into a single, tradeable view of that likelihood.

No-hitters are historically uncommon single-game feats in professional baseball and are tracked separately from perfect games; they can be thrown by a single pitcher or by multiple pitchers in combination. Recent changes in pitcher usage, bullpen specialization, and analytics-driven matchups have altered how no-hitters arise, with combined no-hitters becoming more visible as starter workloads are managed.

Market prices reflect the collective judgment of traders and update as new information arrives; they provide a continually refreshed signal rather than a definitive prediction. Use prices alongside box scores, lineups, and weather/park data to form trading or betting decisions.

Key Factors

Frequently Asked Questions

What exactly counts as a 'no-hitter' for resolving this specific market?

This market is resolved based on the event definition posted by the exchange; typically, that follows the professional league's official definition where no hits are allowed over the official length of the game as recorded by the league/official scorer. Check the market rules for the authoritative source used to settle outcomes.

Will a combined no-hitter (multiple pitchers) count toward this event?

Whether a combined no-hitter counts depends on the market's settlement language, but exchanges commonly accept combined no-hitters so long as the official game record shows zero hits allowed for the opponent over the required innings.

How are extra innings, suspended games, and rain-shortened games treated for this market?

Treatment of extra innings and suspended or shortened games is governed by the market's settlement criteria; under standard league rules, a no-hitter must cover the required official game length (usually nine innings) and suspended games resumed and completed are typically evaluated on the final official result, while rain-shortened games that do not reach the official length may not qualify.

Which authoritative source will the market use to determine whether a no-hitter occurred?

The market will use the official source specified in its contract (commonly the league's official game report or a designated statistics provider); consult the market description for the exact resolver named by the exchange.

When does this market close and when will the outcome be declared?

The market currently lists its close time as TBD; the exchange will announce a specific close time and settlement timing, and outcomes will be declared after the official game result is published by the designated authority named in the market rules.

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