| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anthony Edwards: 4+ | 52% | 46¢ | 51¢ | — | $57 | Trade → |
| Anthony Edwards: 2+ | 93% | 66¢ | 89¢ | — | $5 | Trade → |
| Anthony Edwards: 5+ | 0% | 7¢ | 33¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Anthony Edwards: 3+ | 0% | 48¢ | 77¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Anthony Edwards: 6+ | 0% | 0¢ | 20¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which three-point outcome will occur in the Memphis at Minnesota game; it matters for bettors and fans who want to express expectations about how many threes will be made in that specific matchup.
Memphis and Minnesota have distinct offensive profiles: Memphis typically relies on ball movement and perimeter shooting from specialists, while Minnesota features high-usage scorers who can both create and take threes. Historical three-point rates, recent form, injuries, and coaching game plans all shape how many attempts and makes you should expect in any particular meeting between these teams.
Market prices are an aggregate, real-time reflection of traders’ expectations for the listed three-point outcomes; interpret shifts as the market updating to new information (injuries, starting lineups, pace, etc.) rather than as fixed truth.
Resolution timing is tied to the market’s close and the official game statistics used by the platform; the winning outcome is determined by the final official box-score stat(s) specified on this market’s page once the game has concluded and any applicable resolution window has passed.
Each outcome corresponds to a distinct, mutually exclusive range or bucket of three-pointers as defined on the market page; check the market description for the exact numeric cutpoints that distinguish those five outcomes.
Whether overtime is included depends on the market’s specific rules — consult the market description or the platform’s resolution rules for this event to confirm if overtime statistics are counted.
Late scratches or changes to the starting lineup can materially alter expected three-point volume (e.g., removal of a high-volume shooter or insertion of a defensive specialist); monitor official injury reports and confirmed starters up through tip-off and update your position accordingly.
Low volume implies limited liquidity: prices may move sharply on relatively small trades, spreads can be wider, and the market price may be a noisier signal of consensus — trade size and timing matter more in low-liquidity markets.