| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scottie Barnes: 2+ | 38% | 37¢ | 41¢ | — | $29 | Trade → |
| Scottie Barnes: 1+ | 76% | 67¢ | 75¢ | — | $13 | Trade → |
| Scottie Barnes: 3+ | 0% | 8¢ | 35¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks how many blocked shots will be recorded in the Toronto at Houston game and lets traders express expectations about rim protection and defensive impact in that specific matchup. It matters because blocks are a high-variance, game-level defensive stat that reflect matchups, rotations, and game flow.
Toronto at Houston refers to the single head-to-head game between the Toronto franchise and the Houston franchise; the market ties directly to the official box score from that scheduled game. Historical tendencies—team defensive schemes, recent lineup changes, and how each side defends the rim—can all influence the number of blocks, but those factors evolve across seasons and even within a week. Traders often consider recent head-to-head meetings and the latest available injury and rotation news when evaluating expectations.
Market odds are a real-time aggregation of what traders think the final block total will be for this specific game; treat them as a consensus expectation that updates as news and betting flow arrive.
It references the scheduled Toronto at Houston game specified by the market listing; the market will use the official final box score from that specific matchup to determine the outcome.
Settlement uses the block statistic as recorded in the game's official box score by the league; any play recorded as a blocked shot in the official statistics counts toward the market outcome.
The market resolves based on the game's official final box score; settlement may follow after the box score is finalized and any league corrections are processed per the platform's rules.
Monitor the teams' primary frontcourt defenders and any recent addition to the rotation who plays near the rim, plus any returning or injured players whose availability would change minutes for interior defenders.
Late changes to the active roster can materially alter expected blocks because they change which players are defending the rim and how many minutes key shot-blockers will play; traders typically update positions when such news appears.