| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before 2027 | 99% | 99¢ | 100¢ | — | $26K | Trade → |
This market asks whether Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown will play together on the Boston Celtics again. It matters because their pairing influences team identity, roster construction, playoff prospects, and fan and investor expectations.
Tatum and Brown have been the Celtics' core for multiple seasons, with on-court chemistry, playoff runs, and occasional public tension shaping speculation about their future together. NBA roster moves are driven by contracts, trades, injuries, and front-office strategy, any of which can change whether two star players remain teammates.
Prediction market prices reflect traders’ collective assessment of news, contracts, and likely transactions; they update as new information arrives. Use the market as a real-time gauge of consensus while checking the contract terms and official NBA transaction records that govern settlement.
Settlement depends on the market's contract terms; typically it means both players appearing on the Boston Celtics' official roster and being eligible to play in an NBA game under league transaction records by the market's settlement cutoff.
Most markets use official NBA transaction reports and roster lists to determine eligibility; if a trade moves one player off Boston prior to the settlement cutoff, that would generally count as not playing together unless the contract specifies otherwise—check the market rules for precise settlement criteria.
The event’s closure defines the cutoff date; until the market specifies or updates the close date, outcomes are judged relative to that eventual settlement date as stated in the contract terms.
Major items include contract extensions or option decisions, verified trade reports, authoritative statements from the team or players, and sudden shifts such as injury news or front-office changes—these create new information that traders incorporate.
A new contract increases the likelihood they remain teammates but does not guarantee it; trades, buyouts, or future roster moves can still separate players, so traders will continue to price the market based on evolving information.