| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Draymond Green: 1+ | 63% | 37¢ | 63¢ | — | $149 | Trade → |
| Draymond Green: 2+ | 27% | 2¢ | 27¢ | — | $110 | Trade → |
| Kawhi Leonard: 2+ | 55% | 48¢ | 54¢ | — | $47 | Trade → |
| Kawhi Leonard: 3+ | 29% | 6¢ | 29¢ | — | $26 | Trade → |
| Kawhi Leonard: 1+ | 77% | 59¢ | 87¢ | — | $22 | Trade → |
| Draymond Green: 3+ | 25% | 0¢ | 25¢ | — | $10 | Trade → |
This market asks which of six mutually exclusive outcomes will describe the steals total for the listed game between Los Angeles C and Golden State. It matters because steals are a high-variance, game-level defensive statistic that can be influenced by rotations, matchup decisions, and game flow.
The market is tied to a single game between Los Angeles C and Golden State and will resolve based on the official steals total recorded for that matchup. Historical context matters: some franchises and specific player types (defensive guards/forwards, active on-ball defenders, and teams that pressure the ball) routinely produce higher steal counts, but single-game totals can swing due to injuries, rotations, and tempo.
Each outcome represents a different discrete steals result for this specific game (there are six possible outcomes listed). Read each outcome as a mutually exclusive event that will be resolved against the official game box score once the game is complete.
The six listed outcomes are mutually exclusive results that cover the possible official steals totals for this game as specified by the market. Each outcome corresponds to a particular steals range or exact total defined by the market listing; only one outcome will be declared the winner when the market resolves.
The market closes as indicated on the event page (currently listed as TBD) or at the organizer's posted cutoff; settlement typically occurs after the game's official box score is finalized and any league corrections are applied. Check the market page for the exact closing and settlement policy.
Most markets that reference a game's official steals total include overtime in the final box score unless the event description explicitly excludes overtime. The market will settle to whatever the official scorer and league record as the final game total.
Watch the active guards and wing defenders who log heavy minutes and are credited with on-ball pressure or passing lane reads; check the announced starting lineups, recent game logs for steal counts, and any defensive assignments. Late scratches or rotation changes can materially alter which players drive the steals total.
Substitutions and foul trouble can reduce minutes for primary defenders, lowering steal opportunities, while bench players may have different steal rates. A close, competitive game tends to keep starters on the floor and can concentrate steals among primary defenders; a blowout may either increase garbage-time opportunistic steals or reduce minutes for starters, changing the distribution of steal opportunities.