| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UCF scores 10 points first | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| UCLA scores 10 points first | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team, UCF or UCLA, will be the first to reach 10 points in their game. It matters because early scoring dynamics can signal game flow and are influenced by both pregame matchups and in-game events.
UCF and UCLA come into this matchup with different offensive styles, roster strengths, and situational tendencies that shape how quickly they score. Historical matchups between the programs may be limited, so analysts typically rely on each team’s recent season pace, red-zone efficiency, and turnover rates to assess early-game scoring prospects.
Market prices reflect traders’ collective assessment of which team is more likely to hit 10 points first and will update with new information such as injuries, starting lineups, and in-game developments. Use the market as a real-time indicator rather than a fixed prediction—prices can move rapidly once the game starts.
Resolution depends on the market’s published rules, but generally it resolves at the moment the official game score shows one team has reached at least 10 points. Check the KALSHI event page for the exact resolution trigger and any timing details.
Whether overtime counts is governed by the event’s resolution rules. Some markets include overtime while others limit resolution to regulation play; consult the event page to confirm which applies here.
All officially recorded scoring plays count toward a team’s running total as listed on the official game score: touchdowns plus any extra points or two-point conversions, field goals, and safeties contribute their official point values to the team’s cumulative score.
Yes. Changes to the starting quarterback, primary receivers, running backs, or pivotal offensive linemen can materially shift expectations for early scoring, and markets typically react quickly when such news is announced.
Look at each team’s recent pace of play, points scored in the first quarter, red-zone touchdown rate, turnover frequency, and how they start games under the current coaching staff; these metrics are more informative than distant head-to-head history for predicting who reaches 10 points first.