| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brooklyn | 0% | 1¢ | 99¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Detroit | 0% | 1¢ | 99¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Tie | 0% | 1¢ | 99¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win the second half of the Brooklyn vs Detroit game; it matters for traders who want to isolate performance after halftime rather than the full-game result.
Brooklyn and Detroit are being evaluated only on points scored in the game's third and fourth quarters, creating a distinct betting market from full-game outcomes. Second-half results are often driven by coaching adjustments, rotation decisions, and in-game momentum rather than pregame lines. Because the market closes TBD, traders should monitor lineup and injury news up to halftime and consult the market page for settlement rules.
Market prices reflect the collective assessment of which team will outscore the other in the second half and will move as new information (injuries, rotations, momentum) becomes available. Treat the market as a real-time expression of expectations for only the second-half period, not the final-game outcome.
The market's close time is listed as TBD; check the market page for the official trading cutoff. Many exchanges stop trading at or shortly before the official start of the second half, but confirm the platform-specific deadline.
This market offers three outcomes corresponding to the second-half result: Brooklyn wins the second half, Detroit wins the second half, and the tie option if both teams score exactly the same number of points in the third and fourth quarters. Refer to the market page for the exact outcome labels used by the platform.
Overtime treatment depends on the platform's settlement rules; some markets consider only regulation second-half points while others specify how overtime is handled. Consult the event's settlement terms on the market page to see whether overtime is included or excluded.
A halftime illness or ruled-out player is new information that often shifts market expectations because it affects second-half rotations and scoring capacity; prices will typically move to reflect the change once the news is public. Settlement itself is based solely on the on-court second-half scoring as recorded by the official scorer.
Historical second-half splits and head-to-head second-half performance can provide context about coaching tendencies and late-game execution, but they should be combined with current-season form, lineup availability, and in-game developments for real-time assessment. Use them as one input among injury reports, minute restrictions, and observed halftime adjustments.