| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| New York wins by over 2.5 Points | 51% | 49¢ | 51¢ | — | $93K | Trade → |
| New York wins by over 4.5 Points | 42% | 42¢ | 44¢ | — | $6K | Trade → |
| New York wins by over 1.5 Points | 56% | 54¢ | 55¢ | — | $3K | Trade → |
| New York wins by over 8.5 Points | 31% | 29¢ | 31¢ | — | $2K | Trade → |
| New York wins by over 5.5 Points | 41% | 39¢ | 41¢ | — | $1K | Trade → |
| New York wins by over 7.5 Points | 36% | 32¢ | 35¢ | — | $1K | Trade → |
| New York wins by over 11.5 Points | 24% | 22¢ | 24¢ | — | $1K | Trade → |
| New York wins by over 14.5 Points | 19% | 14¢ | 19¢ | — | $1K | Trade → |
| New York wins by over 17.5 Points | 13% | 11¢ | 13¢ | — | $531 | Trade → |
| New York wins by over 10.5 Points | 27% | 23¢ | 26¢ | — | $395 | Trade → |
| Toronto wins by over 8.5 Points | 20% | 19¢ | 21¢ | — | $238 | Trade → |
| Toronto wins by over 2.5 Points | 38% | 36¢ | 38¢ | — | $192 | Trade → |
| Toronto wins by over 4.5 Points | 30% | 30¢ | 32¢ | — | $186 | Trade → |
| Toronto wins by over 1.5 Points | 39% | 40¢ | 41¢ | — | $169 | Trade → |
| Toronto wins by over 14.5 Points | 10% | 8¢ | 10¢ | — | $109 | Trade → |
| Toronto wins by over 11.5 Points | 13% | 12¢ | 15¢ | — | $35 | Trade → |
| New York wins by over 16.5 Points | 13% | 11¢ | 13¢ | — | $14 | Trade → |
| Toronto wins by over 7.5 Points | 25% | 22¢ | 25¢ | — | $6 | Trade → |
| Toronto wins by over 13.5 Points | 11% | 12¢ | 13¢ | — | $6 | Trade → |
| Toronto wins by over 10.5 Points | 0% | 15¢ | 18¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Toronto wins by over 5.5 Points | 0% | 27¢ | 29¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| New York wins by over 13.5 Points | 0% | 18¢ | 20¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the visiting New York team will cover various point-spread thresholds against Toronto. Spread markets matter because they convert game outcomes into margin-based binary questions that traders use to express expectations and hedge risk.
The matchup pits New York on the road against Toronto; home-ice/court advantage, travel, and scheduling often shape expected margins. Historical matchups and recent form for each franchise provide useful context, but the market aggregates evolving information such as injuries, rotations, and game-time decisions.
In a spread market, each outcome represents a bet on whether the game margin will exceed a particular threshold. Market prices reflect the crowd’s consensus about those margins and update as new information arrives.
Resolution timing depends on the platform’s event rules and the scheduled game; typically spread markets resolve after the official game final is posted, but confirm the market’s specific close and resolution policy on the event page.
They correspond to a series of discrete spread thresholds (different margins) such that each outcome pays if the final game margin surpasses that threshold in the specified direction.
Significant late news commonly moves prices as traders update expectations; the market reacts quickly to confirmed reports about starters, minutes reductions, or unexpected absences.
Handling of postponements or cancellations follows the platform’s resolution rules—common approaches include voiding affected bets or delaying resolution until an official completion—so check the exchange’s rules for this event.
Look for trends such as how New York has performed on the road against Toronto over recent seasons, how each team fares in away/home environments, and whether either team tends to win by narrow margins or decisive margins; use public game logs and matchup summaries to identify persistent tendencies.