Anytime Goal Scorer Betting

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What Is Anytime Goalscorer Betting? Anytime Goalscorer betting (also known as 'To Score' or 'Goalscorer' betting) is as simple as it sounds - so long as the player you've bet on scores at least one goal during ‘regulation time’ i.e. Within the designated 90 minutes. An Anytime Goalscorer bet is a bet placed on a player to score within the 90 minutes (plus injury time) of a match. The benefit of Anytime Goal scorer betting is that your bet can be alive for the whole game.

This Anytime Goalscorer Betting Tips page is your best source if you're looking for a player scoring anytime in a soccer game. So who will score in today's game? Find out with our predictions.

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Scorer

Football is the most popular betting sport in the world. Online bookmakers publish odds in pre-match, in-play and ante most markets. More than half of all internet sports bets are placed on football fixtures. The most bet on competitions are the Premier League in England and the Champions League. Bookmakers display the three-way match winner market with a link to additional markets. The most popular markets are the match winner, handicaps and totals. Many bettors like to bet on the more difficult to predict markets, that have more variables, and provide the potential for a decent win from a small stake. These markets include any time goalscorer, first goalscorer and last goalscorer. The interest in these options has created a demand for anytime and first and last goalscorer tips.

Goalscorer Markets Explained

Bookmakers typically offer three scorer markets which are covered by many online and offline sources of goalscorer tips. Here are the three types of market explained:

Anytime Goalscorer

The market involves predicting a player to score one or more goals at any stage of a match. Different bookmakers have alternate rules about substituted players and players who don’t start a match, or if there are no goals. The odds for an anytime goalscorer are generally about one third the odds for the first or last scorer. Tipsters who publish any time goalscorer tips consider team and player scoring records.

First Goalscorer

The first goalscorer market is one of the more speculative football betting options. The favourite generally starts at about 6/1. The interest in backing players to score the first goal has led to the need for proofed first goalscorer tips. In the event of a goalless draw all bets are lost. If the first goal is an own goal, it generally does not count, and first scorer bets are settled based on the player who scores the second goal. If a backed player does not take any part, bets are refunded. There are also specific rules regarding substitutions.

Last Goalscorer

The odds for the last scorer are the same as the odds for the first scorer. There are rules concerning substations and players who do not play in a match. Own goals do not count and if the only goal is an own goal bets are settled as losers. There are many sources of last goalscorer tips online and they are free or carry a subscription charge. Some bettors prefer the last scorer market to the first scorer market as it is more likely to keep the interest going right until the end of the match. The bet runs until the end of a match and a late substitute can come on and score the last goal. Despite the variables, there is huge demand for last goalscorer tips.

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Bookmaker Goalscorer Offers

Bookmakers are happy to take scorer bets because of the number of variables and the speculative nature of the bet. Obviously, forwards score more goals than defenders and they are almost always the favourites in the betting. Individual scoring records are reflected in the goalscorer tips. However, the market can be unpredictable. Defenders go forward for set pieces and do score goals. Due to the unpredictability of the outcome, bookmakers encourage bettors to bet in these markets by offering promotions and bonuses. Here are some popular first, last and anytime scorer promotions:

Enhanced Odds

First goalscorer tips are in demand because of the value in the odds and bookmaker offers. The odds on selected players are boosted in the anytime, first and last scorer markets. A player who averages about one goal every two matches will be just under evens to score a goal. Statistically, the player is just as likely to score as not score. Bettors may be able to back the player to score at enhanced odds of 6/4. The first and last scorer odds will be boosted in similar proportions.

Double Odds

The double odds concession is another incentive for bettors to invest in first goalscorer tips. If the backed player scores the first goal and scores another goal in the match, first scorer bets will be settled at double the odds. A team’s leading scorer will obviously be popular in this market, but other players may be available at long odds, particularly if they are defenders or unlikely to start the match. Player and team scoring statistics are useful in identifying the best bets. However, some bettors take a shortcut and pay for first goalscorer tips. The boost can provide a decent win for a modest stake.

Triple Odds

Some bookmakers take the double odds concession a stage further. If the backed player scores two more goals at any time, first goalscorer bets are settled at triple the odds. So, when a player is 6/1 to score the first goal, customers will be paid out at 18/1 if the player scores again and completes a hat-trick. This type of bet and concession attracts small-staking bettors because of the potential rewards. The interest in this type of bet means bettors will be keen to invest in goalscorer tips.

English Premier League And Scorer Tips

The Premier League in England is the most popular football competition for betting in the world. The clubs have the financial resources to pay for the best coaches and players. Some of the best overseas strikers in the world play in the Premier League, like Sergio Aguero (Manchester City) and Mo Salah (Liverpool). These names appear on any list of first goalscorer tips. Top-level strikers like Aguero and Salah would be expected to score over 20 goals a season over a full programme of 38 matches. Due to their popularity at home, English players such as Harry Kane, Jamie Vardy and Marcus Rashford are especially popular first goalscorer tips, and odds may reflect that.

Champions League And Scorer Tips

Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo have excellent scoring records in La Liga in Spain and Serie A in Italy respectively, and both in the Champions League, so are extremely popular first goalscorer tips. These two prolific players play almost every match barring injury and score goals at a fast rate. Bookmakers offer short odds on these players to scoring the first and last goal and at anytime. Messi and Ronaldo score at rates of almost one goal a match and that record has been sustained for many years. These respective scoring records are reflected in the odds and the betting before and during a match. The club’s penalty taker should also be considered when using first goalscorer tip to create a bet.

For those interested in players to score markets, you can get free stats on every player in the Premier League, Championship and major European leagues at our football predictor site, Infogol.net, and on the App. This includes total shots, goals and ratios.

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Football is, ultimately, a sport that revolves around the people on the pitch. Knowing the talents of the individual that make up the two sides that are competing in the match that you’re betting on with put you in the best possible position of having more money to play with at the end of your betting run. In this instance that’s a reference to whether or not select players have the ability to put the ball in the back of the net and, more specifically, when they’re likely to do it.

The First / Last / Anytime Goalscorer markets are popular ones because they give you better odds than the more broad option of betting on whether or not a team as a whole will score a goal during the match that they’re playing. On this page I’ll have a look at the three different types of bet, explaining how they all work and exploring what happens to the bet if a specific incident occurs during the game, such as the first goal being scored before the player is on the pitch.

How Does the Bet Work?

A quick look at other pages on this site will show you that I’m a firm believer in explaining how bets work for those that might not already know. The worst thing that you can do in betting is assume that someone knows what you’re talking about when it’s entirely possible that they’ve never placed a bet before in their life.

If you’re a regular bettor then you might want to skip this section, though I’ve often found that there’s no harm in reminding yourself how a bet works. I’ll explain them all individually, given that they work in slightly different ways. Here’s a screen grab of Paddy Power’s odds for all three options in a game between Aston Villa and QPR, which I’ll refer to as I talk about them:

Anytime Goal Scorer Betting

First Goalscorer

The one bit of credit that you have to give bookmakers is that they give their bets nice and simple titles most of the time. This bet says that you think that a given player is going to score the first goal of the game that you’re betting on. It’s that simple. If they do indeed score the first goal then your bet is a winner, whilst if another player manages to get on the scoresheet before them then your bet will be a loser.

Last Goalscorer

This bet also has a title that tells you everything you need to know about it. You’re betting here on your chosen player scoring the final goal of the game, so it doesn’t matter if a goal has been scored already by the time your player bags one. In fact, there can be anything from one to one-hundred goals and as long as the very last one of the game is scored by your player then your bet will be a winner. You can see from the screenshot of the Paddy Power odds that they are usually identical for the Last Goalscorer Market as the First Goalscorer one. Very occasionally this might not be the case, but that’s only if a player has made a name for themselves by only ever scoring the opening or closing goal of a game.

Anytime Goalscorer

If you’ve been paying attention then you’ll know exactly what I’m going to say this bet is about. Here you’re placing a wager on a player scoring at any point during the game, so it doesn’t matter if someone has scored before them or someone scores after them. Your bet will be a winner as long as the player you’ve placed it on gets themselves onto the scoresheet at some point during the match. If you again refer to the Paddy Power odds, you’ll see that Anytime Goalscorer odds tend to be longer than First and Last Goalscorer markets. That’s because a player could score the third goal in the game but it might not be the final one, whereas if they score the third and you’ve placed an Anytime Goalscorer bet then it doesn’t matter if someone scores after them.

A Few Things Worth Remembering

There are a couple of different things that you’ll want to remember when you’re placing, or have already placed, bets on the First / Last / Anytimes Goalscorer markets. The first is that Own Goals don’t count. That means that if the first goal is an Own Goal and is scored by the player you placed your bet on then it won’t be a winner – they have to score for the club that they play for in order for it to be counted. The good news is that most bookies treat Own Goals as though they don’t exist when it comes to the Goalscorer market. If there were two goals in a game and the first one was an Own Goal then the second goal will be used to settled all bets.

A one goal game settles all bets as winners if they’re placed on the correct goalscorer. What I mean by that is, say you placed a First Goalscorer bet, a Last Goalscorer bet and an Anytime Goalscorer bet on Jack Grealish in the Aston Villa versus QPR match from above. Well, if Jack Grealish scores and his is the only goal of the game then all three of those bets will be winners. That’s because he’s scored at Anytime, he was the First Goalscorer and he was also the Last Goalscorer.

Something else to think about is that, unless otherwise stated, you’re betting on the ninety minutes of the main game of a football match. That is to say, if you’re betting on a cup match and it ends up going to extra-time and penalties then it doesn’t matter if your player scores after the full-time whistle is blown at the end of the normal period of time. They can go on to score a hat-trick in extra-time but unless your bookmaker specifies that bets will include any extra-time period then those goals won’t count towards your bet. That’s different from added injury time, of course, which counts as being part of the ninety minutes as far as bookies are concerned.

Each-Way Bets

There’s another type of bet that you can place on the First Goalscorer market, which is an Each-Way bet. As with something like horse racing, the Each-Way bet gives you additional places within your bet. That means that if you place an Each-Way First Goalscorer bet and your player doesn’t score first but does score the second or third goal then you’ll still get a payout. Again, though, as with horse racing, the payout won’t be as large as if they’d scored the first goal outright.

This is a way of mitigating your losses if you think the player you’re betting on is going to score but you’re not 100% sure when during the game they’ll do it. You’ll get better odds than opting for the Anytime Goalscorer market, which is why it’s worth considering. As you can see from this look at the Paddy Power odds, they’ll pay 1/3 odds for five places. That means that you’ll get some money back if your player scores anything from the first to the fifth goal in the match.

Insured First Goalscorer Bets

Some bookmakers offer Insured First Goalscorer bets, such as Paddy Power’s Insurebet First Goalscorer option. This is slightly different to an Each-Way First Goalscorer bet, as you don’t get paid out if your player scores later in the game but doesn’t get the First Goal. In other words, instead of getting paid out at reduced odds if your First Goalscorer selection scores later in the game but didn’t net the first goal, you’ll get your stake refunded back to you.

What if Your Player Doesn’t Start?

There are numerous circumstances that might lead you to place a bet on a player that doesn’t end up starting the game. If that happens then don’t worry, you can still end up winning your bet, depending on which type you’ve placed. If there’s been no goal before your player comes on then the bet becomes live the second that they do, meaning that if they score at that point then your bet will be a winner if it’s an Anytime Goalscorer bet or First Goalscorer bet, or it’s the final goal of the match and you’ve placed a Last Goalscorer bet.

If there’s already been a goal before your player is substituted on then what happens to your bet will depend on the type of bet that you placed. If you went for the First Goalscorer option then your bet will be made void. If you’ve opted for a Last Goalscorer or Anytime Goalscorer bet, however, then your bet will be active as the scoring of a goal before then makes no difference to it. Of course, if your player appears on the pitch for even one second before the full-time whistle goes and doesn’t score then your bet will become a losing one.

Scorecast & Wincast

There are variations on the Goalscorer theme, which include the likes of Scorecast and Wincast bets. Scorecast bets are ones in which you’re predicting a player to score the First Goal and guessing at the correct score of the match overall. As you’d imagine, the combination of both of those events means that the odds you’ll get on that type of bet are longer than just opting for either the Correct Score or First Goalscorer markets individually. Here’s a look at Stoke’s game against Everton in the Premier League in the 2017-2018 season:


The odds on Peter Crouch to be the First Goalscorer for that game were 6/1, with odds on a full-time score of 3-3 being 90/1, yet the combined option in the Scorecaast gives odds of 360/1.

A Wincast bet, meanwhile, is a bet on a player scoring a goal and a specific match outcome. Some bookmakers will specify that it’s a First Goalscorer bet and a bet on the result of the match, but traditionally the player can score at any point in the game. Here’s an other look at that match between Stoke and Everton and the three possible outcomes of the match with Peter Crouch scoring:

You can see here that the overall odds change depending on the overall outcome of the game that you opt for, even if you stick with the same First Goalscorer. A Crouch goal obviously makes a win for Stoke more obvious, given that he plays for them, so the odds are 15/2. A Crouch goal means that a draw becomes less likely, so the odds are longer at 33/1. Finally, a Crouch goal means that Everton would need to score two to win the game, so that’s the option with the longest odds at 50/1.

Betting on No Goals

Another option open to you is the ability to bet on No Goalscorer. This is, as the title suggests, an assumption that there will be no goals during the game. You’ll find the option within the list in the Goalscorer Market, such as this:


Interestingly, the No Goalscorer market can sometimes give you better odds than opting for the 0-0 in the Correct Score Market. In the Stoke versus Everton game, for example, the 0-0 Correct Score was 15/2, compared to 6/1 for No Goalscorer. That’s because the No Goalscorer option includes the possibility of Own Goals, given that they don’t count towards the First / Last / Anytime Goalscorer markets. That means that you could bet on No Goalscorer and a match could feature ten goals, but as long as they’re all Own Goals your bet will be a winner with most bookmakers.

What to Think About Before Placing Your Bet

Anytime Goal Scorer Betting Premier League

If you’re looking at placing a bet in the First / Last / Anytime Goalscorer market then there are a few things you can think about before going ahead with your wager. In short, research is your best friend. Are there any players in a team that have a habit of scoring opening goals in games? Are there others that tend to be used as substitutes and specialise in coming on late to score goals?

Anytime Goal Scorer Betting Scoring

Another thought you’ll want to have is whether or not teams tend to have specialise set-piece players. After all, some sides have players that seem to be able to score goals out of nothing simply because they know how to take free-kicks. If that’s the case then they’ll be worth considering for Anytime Goalscorer bets, especially if they tend not to be big goalscorer the rest of the time.