| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| James Harden | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Bam Adebayo | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether any player will record a triple-double in the Miami at Cleveland game; it matters because triple-doubles are impactful, rare performances that change game narratives and betting outcomes.
A triple-double occurs when a player records double digits in three statistical categories in one game, and they tend to come from primary ball-handlers or versatile bigs who accumulate points, rebounds, and assists. Miami and Cleveland often feature different styles of play and rotation patterns, so recent lineup decisions, usage distribution, and matchup history between the teams influence how likely a triple-double is. Past seasons show frequency varies by roster and season context, so current roster construction and minutes allocations are key context.
Market prices express the market's consensus expectation and will move as lineup news, injuries, and in-game developments arrive; settlement follows the official game statistics source specified by the market operator.
The market's close time is shown on the market page (currently listed as TBD); markets typically close before scheduled tip-off. If the game is delayed or postponed, the platform's published rules and any market-specific notices determine extensions, suspensions, or settlement adjustments—check announcements on the market page for updates.
This market tracks whether any individual player in the Miami vs. Cleveland game records a triple-double. If you want a bet on a named player, confirm whether the market lists player-specific outcomes; this particular market is about the game-level occurrence.
Settlement uses the official box score data source specified by the market operator; a triple-double is achieved when a player records at least 10 in three of the standard statistical categories (points, rebounds, assists, steals, blocks) as recorded in that official source.
Yes. Overtime statistics are included in the official game totals and therefore count toward a player's cumulative totals used for settlement.
Late scratches and injury news typically influence market pricing because they change who can play and how many minutes key players will receive. For settlement, a player who does not appear in the official game box score cannot register a triple-double; monitor official lineup and injury updates prior to tip-off.