yes Scottie Barnes: 4+,yes Milwaukee,yes San Antonio,yes Boston,yes Orlando,yes Nickeil Alexander-Walker: 15+,yes Onyeka Okongwu: 10+,yes Brandon Miller: 15+,yes Miles Bridges: 10+,yes Franz Wagner: 10+,yes Paul George: 15+,yes OG Anunoby: 10+,yes Jalen Johnson: 6+,yes OG Anunoby: 4+,yes Atlanta wins by over 4.5 points,yes Philadelphia wins by over 3.5 points,no New York wins by over 15.5 points
What do these odds mean?
Cross-platform data for yes Scottie Barnes: 4+,yes Milwaukee,yes San Antonio,yes Boston,yes Orlando,yes Nickeil Alexander-Walker: 15+,yes Onyeka Okongwu: 10+,yes Brandon Miller: 15+,yes Miles Bridges: 10+,yes Franz Wagner: 10+,yes Paul George: 15+,yes OG Anunoby: 10+,yes Jalen Johnson: 6+,yes OG Anunoby: 4+,yes Atlanta wins by over 4.5 points,yes Philadelphia wins by over 3.5 points,no New York wins by over 15.5 points is still being collected.
How to read cross-platform spreads
When two platforms price the same event meaningfully differently, it usually means one of three things: liquidity is thin on one side, fee structures are pushing a spread, or traders on one platform have information the other lacks. Spreads larger than 5 percentage points on events with over $50K in volume often resolve toward the higher-volume platform's price.
About this data
Beeks.ai aggregates prediction market data from Polymarket, Kalshi, and Manifold. Updates run every minute. Consensus probability is a volume-weighted average across all matched markets. Historical snapshots are stored for calibration analysis.
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