| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Both Teams To Score | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether both Tottenham and Sunderland will score at least one goal during their match. It matters because 'both teams to score' markets focus on the balance between attacking potential and defensive resilience rather than who wins.
Tottenham and Sunderland are English clubs with distinct recent trajectories and styles; matchup dynamics often reflect differences in squad depth, tactics, and venue. Historical head-to-head results and where the game is played (Sunderland's home ground versus an away trip for Tottenham) help set expectations without guaranteeing outcomes.
Prediction market prices reflect the collective view of traders about whether each team will score; prices change in real time as new information (lineups, injuries, weather, form) becomes available. Use movement in the market as an indicator of how incoming news is expected to affect goal-scoring likelihoods.
The outcome is typically settled in favor of 'Yes' if each team scores at least one goal during the match period specified by the market (check the market page for whether settlement uses regulation time only); otherwise it settles as 'No'.
Settlement rules vary by platform: many markets void or suspend trading if the match is postponed or abandoned before completion and will use the official competition/league result or replay information to determine settlement—consult the market's official rule text for this event.
Own goals and penalties scored during the match period usually count toward each team's goal tally; whether extra time counts depends on the market's defined settlement window (most 'both teams to score' markets use regulation time only), so verify the event rules on the market page.
Late injuries or confirmed absences to key attackers or starting defenders can materially change the likelihood of both teams scoring; traders commonly update positions after official team sheets are released because such news affects expected goals and defensive stability.
Relevant clues include recent head-to-head scorelines, each side's home/away scoring patterns, and whether past meetings produced open, high-scoring games or tight, low-scoring affairs; use history as context but weigh current form and squad availability more heavily.