Are singles (‘at least’) markets paid as a winner if the player exactly hits their target?
Single player performance bets (as opposed to over/under) are paid as winners if your player hits their target or more. For example, a target of 20+ would be a winner if the player scored 20 or more points
What happens in a Head to Head in the event of a tie?
The bet is marked as a push/draw.
Timberwolves vs Nuggets: Denver Priced to Cruise, but the 12-Point “Blowout Tax” Tests the Market
Denver Needs 12+ On The Final, Not Just The Win
Denver has to finish up 12 or more to beat Minnesota +11.5. That’s a different job than simply getting the W.
Minnesota +11.5 (-115) cashes even if the Wolves lose by 11. The moneyline has Denver around -500 and Minnesota at +380, and that’s fine for an outright read. This ticket is about whether the Nuggets can build separation and keep it clean through the last rotation cycle.
Thunder vs Suns: OKC Priced to Cruise, but the 11-Point Margin Is a Different Fight
Ten And A Half Is Where NBA Garbage Time Bites
OKC has to win by 11+ on the final to beat Phoenix +10.5. That’s the whole fight at this number, because the last six minutes are where a “comfortable” lead turns into a blowout.
Phoenix +10.5 (-108) cashes if the Suns lose by 10 or less. You’re not buying the upset. You’re buying a game that stays inside a two-digit band even if Oklahoma City is the better side.
Pistons vs Magic: Detroit Should Win, but Why Orlando +2.5 Hinges on the ‘Real’ 3-Point Burn Number
Winning Isn’t Covering When The Game Ends On The Stripe
Detroit can control the game and still not clear the number. Orlando Magic +2.5 (-105) means the Magic can lose by 1 or 2 and still cash.
The moneyline has Detroit in the -148 range, with Orlando around +124. That’s the win bet. This is the margin bet, and Detroit has to finish the job by 3+.
This is hook-around-3 territory, and that’s where late possessions get loud. One empty trip or one split pair can swing the ticket without swinging the winner.
Spurs vs. Trail Blazers: San Antonio Should Win, but the +2.5 Price Hinges on the Real Burn Number
Blazers +2.5 Buys The Clean Loss Window Around 3
Portland +2.5 (-110) is buying the band where the Blazers can lose by 1 or 2 and you still get paid. That’s the entire job at this number.
The Market has San Antonio in the -135 range on the moneyline, with Portland around +114. Fine. That’s a bet on who wins. This ticket is a bet on whether the Spurs can turn a win into a 3+ margin.
Lakers vs. Rockets: Houston Can Win, but +8.5 Turns Late-Game Math Into a Margin Trap
Lakers +8.5 Buys You Late Margin Compression At A Low Total
Los Angeles Lakers +8.5 (-108) is buying the right to be down 7, 8, even 8 late and still get paid. In a game totaled 206.5, that’s a real purchase: fewer possessions means fewer chances for a 10–2 finish that buries an underdog.
Houston can be the more likely winner and that’s fine. The moneyline has the Rockets in the -325 range with the Lakers +260. This bet isn’t asking the Lakers to win. It’s asking Houston to build and keep a 9+ margin.
Celtics vs 76ers: Late-Game Math Puts Boston Win, Philly +7.5 Cover on a Collision Course
Late Margin Stays Live At 214.5
Philadelphia +7.5 (-108) means the Sixers can lose by 7 and still cash. In a game sitting on a 214.5 total, that’s the kind of number that can get squeezed late without flipping the winner.
The bar on Boston is clean: the Celtics have to finish up 8+ to beat this. The moneyline has Boston in the -325 range, so the Market can still lean Celtics to win while the spread asks for a firmer margin.
Nuggets vs Timberwolves: Denver Should Win, but Minnesota +2.5 Reveals the Real Battle At 3
+2.5 Buys Minnesota The Three-Point Game
Minnesota +2.5 (-112) is buying the margin where the Timberwolves can lose by 1 or 2 and you still get paid. That’s the purchase: a tight game that can tilt either way without your ticket dying on the final possession.
The bar for Denver is clean. The Nuggets don’t just need to be the better side; they have to finish up 3 or more to beat this number. That’s the whole thesis at +2.5 in hook-around-3 territory.
Knicks vs Hawks: Why Atlanta’s +1.5 Is the Real Story in a One-Possession Market
Knicks Must Clear Two In A One-Possession Finish
New York has to win by 2+ to beat Atlanta +1.5. That’s the job at this number, and it’s a different fight than just picking the straight-up winner.
Atlanta +1.5 means the Hawks can lose by 1 and still cash. In pick-em territory, that one point is the whole ticket: the game can swing on a single made free throw, a single miss, or one last heave that turns a 2-point game into a 1-point final.
Cavaliers vs Raptors: Cleveland Should Win, but Toronto +2.5 Tests the Market’s True Burn Number
Two And A Half Keeps Toronto Inside The Final Burn
Toronto +2.5 (-105) is a bet on the Raptors staying inside the last bucket. They can lose by 1 or 2 and you still get paid.
The market job at this number is simple: Cleveland has to clear 3+ to beat you, not just be the better side for 48 minutes. That’s the whole point of living in hook-around-3 territory.