| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Victor Wembanyama | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Bam Adebayo | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether at least one player will record a triple-double in the San Antonio at Miami game. It matters to traders and fans because a triple-double is a rare, game-impacting performance that reflects playmaking, rebounding, and scoring balance.
San Antonio and Miami have different styles: Miami typically emphasizes half-court defense and versatile frontcourt play, while San Antonio often mixes youth-driven offense with evolving playmaking. Triple-doubles arise when a player logs high minutes, handles the ball a lot, and benefits from rebounds or assists created by teammates' shot patterns.
Market prices aggregate participant expectations about the likelihood of a triple-double occurring; price movement before the game often reflects new information such as injuries, starting lineups, or announced minutes. Treat the market as a continuously updating consensus rather than a guarantee.
A triple-double is resolved using the official box score statistics adopted by the event platform; it generally means a player records double digits in three separate statistical categories (commonly points, rebounds, and assists), but check the event's rules for the platform's exact definition.
Resolution follows the platform's official box score conventions; most markets include overtime statistics, but you should confirm the specific settlement rules listed on the event page before trading.
This is a binary market: if any player appears with a qualifying triple-double in the official box score used for settlement, the 'Yes' outcome is resolved as successful; if none do, the 'No' outcome wins.
Watch the teams' primary ball-handlers and biggest rebounders—Miami's leading playmakers and frontcourt rebounders and San Antonio's top facilitators and bigs. Pre-game starter and minute announcements will help identify the most plausible candidates for this specific game.
Late changes can materially change the market because they alter minutes and usage patterns; traders often react quickly to injury reports and official starting lineups, so monitor team news and the market price up to the close.