| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Immanuel Quickley: 2+ | 37% | 36¢ | 41¢ | — | $21 | Trade → |
| Immanuel Quickley: 1+ | 67% | 73¢ | 77¢ | — | $3 | Trade → |
| Amen Thompson: 1+ | 0% | 76¢ | 84¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Amen Thompson: 3+ | 0% | 12¢ | 25¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Amen Thompson: 2+ | 0% | 49¢ | 52¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Scottie Barnes: 3+ | 0% | 8¢ | 27¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Immanuel Quickley: 3+ | 0% | 0¢ | 24¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Scottie Barnes: 2+ | 0% | 44¢ | 49¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Scottie Barnes: 1+ | 0% | 75¢ | 82¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market concerns the total steals outcome for the Toronto at Houston game and matters because steals change possession and can influence game flow and scoring opportunities.
This is a matchup between Toronto and Houston where team style — pace, defensive aggressiveness, and who handles the ball — tends to shape how many steals occur. Historical head-to-head tendencies and each club’s defensive schemes (pressing, trapping, switching) provide context, but game-to-game variation is driven by rotations, matchups, and situational factors.
Market prices represent the crowd’s aggregated expectation for the steals outcome and will move as new information (injuries, starting lineups, in-game events) arrives; interpret changes as the market updating that expectation rather than definitive predictions.
Pregame injuries or last-minute lineup changes can materially change expectations because losing or inserting a disruptive defender or a turnover-prone ball-handler changes both steal opportunities and matchup dynamics; markets typically react quickly once credible reports appear.
Whether overtime counts depends on the specific contract rules for this market; consult the event’s contract description on the market page to confirm if totals include overtime periods.
This particular event lists the close time as TBD, so check the market page for the final close; in general, some markets close at or just before tip-off while others allow in-play trading if specified.
The players who most influence this market are each team’s on-ball defenders and primary ball-handlers—point guards, defensive-minded wings, and high-minute perimeter defenders—because they generate or concede the majority of steal opportunities through pressure and turnover creation.
Major in-game events that typically move the market include a starter exiting with injury or foul trouble, an unexpected lineup or rotation change, an ejection, sustained defensive/tempo shifts, or an overtime announcement; any clear change to expected possessions or defensive matchups prompts rapid price updates.