| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Siena scores 10 points first | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Duke scores 10 points first | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team — Siena or Duke — will score the tenth point in their game first. It matters because the first stretch of scoring reflects early-game matchups, starting lineups, and initial strategy, and can offer insight into momentum and team execution.
Siena and Duke come from different program profiles and styles of play; Duke is traditionally a high-profile program with deep rotations, while Siena is often a smaller-conference team that may emphasize different personnel and tempo. Early-game dynamics in college basketball—tip-off strategies, opening possessions, and which players the coaches deploy to start—can strongly shape who reaches 10 points first. Historical head-to-head data and recent game trends for each team’s opening minutes provide useful background but may be limited depending on scheduling and roster turnover.
Market prices reflect traders’ aggregated views about early-game scoring dynamics, informed by factors like starting lineups, injury news, and tempo. Expect prices to move as new information (e.g., confirmed starters, late scratches, or tip time changes) becomes available.
Resolution typically occurs once the official game records (play-by-play or box score) show which team reached 10 first; check the market page for the exchange’s stated resolution trigger and any close time, since this event lists its close as TBD.
Yes—points that are officially credited to a team in the game score count, including field goals, free throws, and technical free throws; consult the platform’s resolution rules if an unusual scoring ruling occurs.
Such situations are handled according to the exchange’s cancellation and voiding policies; many markets are voided or follow a predefined rescheduling resolution rule, so confirm the platform’s policy on the market page.
Exchanges resolve based on the official record from the game’s governing authority; if a correction changes the order, the exchange will follow that official correction when determining the outcome and explain tie-breaker or dispute procedures in its rules.
Watch confirmed starting lineups, last-minute injury or scratch reports, announced rotations, recent opening-minute scoring trends for each team, and any statements from coaches about game plan or pace—these items materially affect early scoring outcomes.