| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether at least one run will be scored during the first inning of the scheduled San Francisco vs San Diego game. First-inning scoring can set early momentum and affects in-game strategy and short-term trading.
San Francisco and San Diego are regular divisional opponents whose matchups feature frequent pitcher-versus-batter rematches and familiar lineups. First-inning run outcomes reflect immediate-game factors—starting pitchers, lineup construction, ballpark conditions—and historical trends between the clubs can provide context but change across seasons.
Market prices represent the collective judgment of traders and update as new information arrives (starting pitchers, lineups, weather). Use prices as a dynamic summary of market expectations rather than a static prediction.
A 'first inning run' is any run that is officially recorded in the first inning of the game as shown in the final official box score for that contest. Settlement follows the official league record for runs scored during the top or bottom of the first inning.
Settlement follows the platform's stated rules and the official game status. If the first inning is not officially completed per league rules, the market may be voided or held until a rescheduled/completed game provides an official first-inning result—check the market's settlement rules for platform-specific details.
Yes. Any run that appears in the official first-inning scoring in the league's box score counts, regardless of whether it scored on an error, wild pitch, passed ball, or other play.
Late scratches, starting pitcher swaps, or changes to the top of the lineup can materially change expectations because first-inning scoring is driven by who is pitching and who is batting early. Markets typically move when official lineups or pitching decisions are announced.
Settlement uses the final official record after all reviews and official scoring decisions are complete. If the official box score is adjusted and the run is removed or added, the market settles according to that final official outcome.