| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| St. John's wins by over 4.5 Points | 50% | 48¢ | 50¢ | — | $1K | Trade → |
| Seton Hall wins by over 2.5 Points | 27% | 27¢ | 32¢ | — | $6 | Trade → |
| Seton Hall wins by over 11.5 Points | 4% | 5¢ | 12¢ | — | $5 | Trade → |
| Seton Hall wins by over 17.5 Points | 3% | 3¢ | 8¢ | — | $5 | Trade → |
| Seton Hall wins by over 8.5 Points | 9% | 10¢ | 17¢ | — | $5 | Trade → |
| St. John's wins by over 10.5 Points | 25% | 25¢ | 31¢ | — | $5 | Trade → |
| St. John's wins by over 1.5 Points | 59% | 59¢ | 64¢ | — | $5 | Trade → |
| Seton Hall wins by over 14.5 Points | 3% | 3¢ | 9¢ | — | $3 | Trade → |
| St. John's wins by over 7.5 Points | 37% | 37¢ | 43¢ | — | $2 | Trade → |
| Seton Hall wins by over 5.5 Points | 15% | 16¢ | 23¢ | — | $1 | Trade → |
| Seton Hall wins by over 20.5 Points | 0% | 3¢ | 5¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market covers the point-spread outcomes for the college basketball game St. John's at Seton Hall; it matters because the spread encodes expectations about the margin of victory and is used by traders to express views or hedge exposure.
St. John's and Seton Hall are conference rivals whose games often produce close, high-stakes matchups with strong home-court effects. Historical matchups, current-season form, roster changes, and coaching decisions all shape how the market prices different spread outcomes, and those inputs can shift quickly as game day approaches.
Market prices reflect the collective assessment of how likely each spread outcome is, and movements signal when new information (injuries, starting lineups, betting flow) changes that assessment. Use prices as a real-time consensus indicator rather than a fixed prediction.
It measures which range of point-margin outcomes will occur relative to a spread; each outcome corresponds to a band of final-score differentials, so buying an outcome is a bet that the final margin will fall in that band.
Home teams often receive a measurable advantage in the spread due to crowd energy, travel for the opponent, and familiarity with the court; the market prices that advantage and will widen or narrow based on additional info like fan availability or team travel issues.
A late injury is high-impact news that usually triggers rapid price movement as traders update expectations; because this market remains open until it closes (TBD), such information can materially change which spread outcomes are favored.
Head-to-head history can highlight matchup tendencies, but its relevance depends on roster continuity and recency; weigh recent meetings and current rosters more heavily than distant results.
Watch official injury reports and starting lineup announcements, late scratches or suspensions, tip-off confirmations, and major betting flow or large trades—these items are the most likely to prompt meaningful market shifts.