| 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 MLB game between the Tampa Bay Rays and the Milwaukee Brewers. First-inning scoring is an immediate indicator of starting pitcher and lineup performance and attracts traders focused on short-term game events.
Tampa Bay and Milwaukee have distinct roster constructions and home ballpark characteristics that can influence early-inning production; matchups between their starting pitchers and top-of-the-order batters often drive outcomes. Historical first-inning results between the clubs have varied with changes to starting rotations, batting orders, and ballpark/weather conditions, so traders typically monitor announced starters and lineups closely before first pitch.
Market odds aggregate participant beliefs about whether a run will score in the first inning and will move as new information (lineups, weather, scratches) becomes available. Use odds as a real-time summary of market consensus rather than a certainty—they update in response to incoming, event-specific information.
A 'First Inning Run' refers to any run that is recorded in the official scoring for the top or bottom of the first inning as reported by the authoritative data source used by the market. Check the event page for the platform's specified data provider if you need the exact resolution standard.
The market resolves once the official source has recorded the outcome of the first inning and the platform processes that data; settlement timing depends on the reporting cadence and the platform's settlement rules listed on the event page.
Announced starters and any late scratches can materially change expectations for first-inning scoring because they alter pitcher-batter matchups and lineup quality; traders commonly update positions after official lineup and starting pitcher announcements.
Resolution in the case of delays or an uncompleted first inning follows the platform's contingency rules—typically tied to whether an inning was officially completed per the designated data source—so consult the event rules for specifics on suspensions or cancellations.
Key influences are the starting pitchers (their ability to handle early lineup traffic) and the top-of-the-order hitters for each team; a team's leadoff batter, on-base threats, and any hitters with notable platoon splits against the opposing starter can be especially important.