| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Both Teams To Score | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether both AS Roma and Como will score at least one goal in their match. It matters because it isolates whether the game will feature goals at both ends, a common way to trade on match balance without picking a winner.
Roma are typically a higher-profile Serie A side with more attacking resources, while Como are often an underdog, recently competing to establish themselves at this level. Matches between uneven sides can still produce both teams scoring depending on tactics, rotation, and form, so this market reflects those dynamics rather than the final result alone.
Market prices indicate the consensus view on whether each team will score, and will shift as news (lineups, injuries, weather) arrives. Interpret movement as changing market expectations driven by real-time information rather than as fixed predictions.
The market is settled based on the official match score: it pays if both teams have at least one goal on the official scoreboard at the end of the match period used for settlement (usually the end of regulation plus stoppage time).
Resolution occurs after the match is completed and the competition operator publishes the official final score for that fixture; if the match is postponed or abandoned, settlement follows the competition’s official decision on that fixture.
If Roma start with a strong, attack-focused XI or key forwards return from injury, they are more likely to score multiple goals, which can increase the chance both teams score if Como are able to create chances; conversely, a defensive or rotated Roma lineup can reduce scoring by them.
Como’s defensive organization, willingness to press or counterattack, set-piece threat, and goalkeeper form are primary factors—an open, attacking approach at home raises the chance both teams score, while a compact defensive plan lowers it.
Yes—any goal that is counted in the official final score (including own goals and penalties that stand after VAR review) contributes to whether each team has scored; overturned goals that are removed from the official score do not count.