| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| San Antonio | 32% | 36¢ | 70¢ | — | $6 | Trade → |
| Boston | 0% | 27¢ | 61¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Tie | 0% | 0¢ | 20¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market lets traders pick which team will outscore the other in the second half of the Boston vs San Antonio game (three-way market: Boston, San Antonio, or a tie). It matters for bettors who want to isolate second-half performance rather than full-game outcomes.
Boston and San Antonio bring different styles, roster constructions, and recent tendencies that shape second-half expectations — Boston often relies on star scoring and late-game execution while San Antonio may emphasize pace and bench contributions. Historical head-to-head trends and each team’s in-game coaching adjustments can swing the second half even if the first half is lopsided.
Market prices on this platform represent the collective expectation of participants at a given moment; they move as new information (injuries, rotations, in-game momentum) arrives and do not guarantee any outcome.
A Boston outcome means Boston scores more points than San Antonio during the official second half period; a San Antonio outcome means San Antonio outscores Boston in that period; a tie outcome means both teams score the same number of points in the second half. The contract definition on the platform governs precise timing and inclusion of any extra periods.
The event page lists the close time as TBD — platforms commonly close second-half markets at or immediately before the official second-half tip-off, but you should check the exchange’s contract details for the exact closing rule for this specific market.
Whether overtime is included depends on the market’s specific settlement rules; many second-half markets only count regulation second-half scoring and exclude overtime, so consult the platform’s contract specification to confirm how extra periods are handled for this event.
Late-game primary scorers and defensive stoppers, key perimeter shooters, the opposing team’s matchup coverage (e.g., how a wing defender handles Boston’s primary scorer), and bench leaders who change momentum are all highly influential — look for players who reliably log heavy second-half minutes and for any anticipated lineup changes at halftime.
Track official injury reports, pre-game starting lineup announcements, halftime press reports, and in-game status updates from reliable beat reporters or the league; those updates can materially change the expected second-half outcome and are often reflected quickly in market prices.