| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Both Teams To Score | 63% | 58¢ | 62¢ | — | $80 | Trade → |
This market asks whether both Vancouver and Portland will record at least one goal in the listed match, a common prop that captures offensive and defensive balance. It matters because BTTS markets summarize whether a game is likely to be open and goal-rich or low-scoring and defensive.
Vancouver Whitecaps and Portland Timbers are Pacific Northwest rivals with a history of competitive MLS meetings; past fixtures between these sides have varied from tight defensive matches to open contests. Team form, roster availability, and tactical setups often swing these matchups toward either end of that spectrum. Venue (home advantage for Portland) and travel across the border can also influence team selection and performance.
Prediction market prices reflect the community’s aggregated view about the likelihood of both teams scoring, but they should be interpreted as evolving sentiment rather than guarantees. Low trading volume on this specific listing can make the market less informative, so combine market signals with independent match information.
The market's close time is listed as TBD on the event page; final closing and resolution will follow the platform’s stated cutoff (typically at or just before kickoff) and be resolved using the official match result published by the competition organizer.
The outcome requires each team to have at least one officially recorded goal in the match score that the competition recognizes at final whistle (including stoppage time); consult the platform’s event rules for any competition-specific treatments of extra time or penalty shootouts.
Prioritize absences of primary goal scorers and the starting goalkeeper for each side, plus tactical hints from the managers (e.g., selecting more defensive midfielders); late changes announced close to kickoff can materially change BTTS expectations.
Yes — patterns in recent head-to-head matches (such as a string of high-scoring games or repeated clean sheets) provide context, but weigh them alongside current-season form and roster differences because team dynamics change over time.
Incidents like early red cards, adverse weather, a last-minute injury to a key attacker, or an unexpected tactical shift (e.g., ultra-defensive setup) can all quickly reduce the chance that both teams score.