| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ✓ Chet Holmgren: 1+ | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Resolved |
| Chet Holmgren: 3+ | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| ✓ Chet Holmgren: 2+ | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Resolved |
This prediction market asks which side of the Oklahoma City at Philadelphia blocks market will occur and is useful for bettors and analysts tracking defensive impact in the game. Blocks are a discrete, countable stat that can swing outcomes for team defensive performance and individual player props.
The market sits atop a single regular-season or postseason matchup between the Oklahoma City and Philadelphia organizations and will settle based on the official game box score. Historical context matters: each team’s style, roster construction, and recent personnel changes shape block profiles, and those factors can change from game to game. Market participants usually monitor starting lineups, injury reports, and recent defensive performance in the days and hours leading up to tip-off.
Market odds represent the collective expectation about which outcome will occur and change as new information arrives; interpret them as a real-time consensus rather than a fixed prediction. Because odds update with injury reports, lineup news, and in-play developments, use them alongside box-score and matchup research.
The three mutually exclusive outcomes are: Oklahoma City records more blocks than Philadelphia, Philadelphia records more blocks than Oklahoma City, or the two teams finish with an equal number of blocks (a tie). The market will settle to whichever one of those outcomes matches the official box score.
The closing time is listed as TBD and typically the market will close before or at the game’s scheduled tip-off; settlement is based on the official postgame box score provided by the league or designated statistic provider after the final buzzer.
Primary contributors tend to be the teams’ starting centers and long-armed frontcourt defenders, plus athletic wings who rotate to contest shots. Check up-to-date starting lineups and injury reports—if a team’s usual rim protector is inactive or limited, secondary shot-blockers and bench players become more important.
Foul trouble can remove key shot-blockers from the floor, reducing their block totals; a blowout can shorten playing time for starters or change defensive intensity, both of which lower block opportunities. Conversely, a close, physical game often increases contested shots and help-defense opportunities that can raise block counts.
Use recent head-to-head games and season defensive tendencies to identify patterns—who defends the paint, how often each team contests shots, and how rotations have changed. Prioritize recent games, lineup continuity, and matchup-specific notes (e.g., a team attacking the basket more) rather than distant historical averages.