| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scottie Barnes | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the Toronto at Phoenix game will feature a triple-double by any player; it matters because a triple-double is a standout individual performance that can swing game dynamics and inform trading decisions.
Toronto and Phoenix have different offensive profiles that influence triple-double likelihood: teams with high-usage guards or versatile forwards tend to generate more assist and rebound opportunities. Triple-doubles are uncommon single-game feats, so player roles, minutes, and matchup context matter more than season-long averages for this specific matchup.
Market prices reflect traders' aggregate expectations about whether a qualifying triple-double will occur and will update as injuries, rotations, and other news arrive; interpret prices as real-time signals, not guarantees.
At least one player must record a triple-double in the official league box score for that game, defined as reaching 10 or more in three statistical categories (points, rebounds, assists, steals, or blocks). The market uses the NBA's official box score at final game completion (including overtime) for settlement.
The close time for this market is listed as TBD; typically the market will close at or before the game's official start, and any final close time will be posted on the market page. Traders should check the market page for updates and assume last-minute roster changes can still affect outcomes until close.
Watch primary ball-handlers, leading assist creators, and versatile forwards who routinely collect rebounds and assists while logging heavy minutes; pregame rotations, usage rates, and any late scratches are the most important signals. A sudden change to a starter's minutes or a bench player stepping into a playmaking role can materially alter triple-double chances.
Overtime increases total minutes and opportunities, raising the chance of a triple-double, while blowouts typically reduce starters' minutes and lower that chance. Foul trouble or injuries to key playmakers or rebounders can rapidly change the live probability by limiting or increasing another player's floor time and usage.
Most single-outcome triple-double markets are binary: if any player records a qualifying triple-double in the official box score, the market resolves 'Yes'; if no player does, it resolves 'No'. Multiple triple-doubles do not affect settlement beyond producing a 'Yes' outcome.