| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Keyonte George | 0% | 0¢ | 69¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether any player will record a triple-double in the NBA game New York at Utah. It matters because it aggregates expectations about player usage, matchup dynamics, and in-game opportunity that drive player-prop outcomes.
Triple-doubles—reaching double digits in three statistical categories, typically points, rebounds, and assists—have become a notable part of modern NBA player evaluation and betting. Frequency depends on player roles, team pace, and rotations; both New York and Utah have featured players with the skill sets that can produce triple-doubles in the right game environment.
Prediction market odds reflect the market's consensus about the likelihood of a triple-double in this specific game and will move as news (injuries, lineup changes, rest decisions) and in-season form become known. Treat odds as a real-time summary of those changing inputs rather than a fixed forecast.
It tracks whether any player records a triple-double in the specified New York at Utah game; check the market description for the precise settlement definition (for example whether it requires points/rebounds/assists or allows other stat combinations).
The market close is listed as TBD; many similar markets close at scheduled tip-off or when official starting lineups are confirmed—watch the market page for the specific close time and any updates.
Focus on each team’s primary playmakers and multi-category contributors: the lead ball-handler(s) who create assists and score, and the versatile forwards/centers who combine rebounding with passing; availability and expected minutes are the deciding signals to watch.
Any change that reduces a high-usage player’s minutes or shifts playmaking duties will materially alter triple-double chances—substantial late scratches or load-management rest typically reduce likelihood, while increased minutes for a primary creator increase it.
Settlement rules vary by market; some include overtime stats and others count regulation only—confirm the market’s rulebook or description before trading to know whether overtime would be included.