| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Draymond Green: 1+ | 59% | 26¢ | 53¢ | — | $195 | Trade → |
| Draymond Green: 2+ | 20% | 0¢ | 19¢ | — | $100 | Trade → |
| Draymond Green: 3+ | 0% | 0¢ | 11¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks how many total blocks will be recorded in the Golden State Warriors at Utah Jazz game; blocks are a key defensive stat that can swing possession and momentum. It matters to traders because blocks are influenced by predictable matchup and lineup factors and often move with injury news and rotations.
Utah has traditionally featured one of the NBA's stronger interior rim protectors, while Golden State's outside shooting and ball movement affect block opportunities differently than teams that attack the rim often. Game-specific factors — such as which starters play, pace of play, and defensive schemes — drive the likely block total more than season-long averages.
Market odds reflect the collective expectation of traders about the final official block total and update as new information (injuries, rotations, rest, weather for travel) becomes available. Use odds as a real-time aggregation of expectations rather than a fixed forecast — they change up to market close and resolution.
The market close time is set by the platform and currently listed as TBD; typically markets for single games close before tip-off and resolve after the official NBA box score is final. Check the market page or platform announcements for the exact close and resolution timing.
The three outcomes are mutually exclusive ranges for the game's total blocks (for example: below a threshold, between two thresholds, and above a threshold). Consult the market description on the platform for the precise thresholds and settlement rules, since those define which outcome wins.
Primary influences are Utah's starting big(s) and Golden State's interior defenders or switchers who challenge shots; role players who log minutes as rim protectors or play heavy minutes in the paint also matter. Late scratches or unexpected lineup changes can shift expectations quickly.
Late reports typically move the market because they change who is on the floor and how many minutes likely shot‑blockers will play. Significant reductions in a team's shot‑blocking minutes or the addition of a rim protector will be reflected in trading as participants update their views.
If the game goes to overtime, blocks recorded in overtime count toward the official total used for settlement unless the market explicitly states otherwise; confirm the market's settlement rules to see whether overtime is included.