NBA Finals Props Retrospective: Exactly as Expected

By Sascha Paruk in NBA Basketball
Updated: July 7, 2020 at 3:30 pm EDTPublished:

Prior to the NBA Finals, we did our usual schtick of setting odds on a number of props, everything from the length of the series to the MVP to the most three-pointers. With potentially just one game left in the 2017 season and the Warriors on the verge of something truly historic (i.e. an undefeated, 16-0 playoff run), now is the time for a quick retrospective on the pre-finals props.
The takeaway from this little retrospective is this: basically nothing surprising has happened in this series, continuing a predictable 2017 postseason where the biggest shocker was a mini, two-game push by the eighth-seeded Bulls in round one.
Who’d have thought an injury to Rajon Rondo would end all playoff drama?
2017 NBA FINALS PROPS: MIDTERM RESULTS
ORIGINAL PROP
Odds the NBA Finals goes …
4 games: 23/4
5 games: 7/2
6 games: 8/5
7 games: 3/1
VERDICT
This is where the surprises begin and end. A sweep was the least likely outcome at the outset. Now it’s the favorite. Up 3-0 and sitting as six-point favorites for Game 4, the odds are about 3/7 (-233) that the Dubs put the finishing nails in their 16-0 armoire on Friday.
ORIGINAL PROP
Odds to win MVP (Bill Russell Award)
Steph Curry: 11/4
Kevin Durant: 11/4
LeBron James: 3/1
Draymond Green: 10/1
Kyrie Irving: 15/1
Klay Thompson: 20/1
Kevin Love: 55/1
FIELD: 99/1
VERDICT
Curry and Durant are indeed the top two candidates for MVP through three games. But they’re no longer statistical equals. KD is staking his claim to the title “best player in the NBA,” averaging 34 PPG on 56-percent shooting. It’s not just his offensive performance that’s solidified his claim to the award; he’s playing the best defense of his career, averaging ten boards and two blocks per game. A clutch, go-ahead triple late in Game 3 could go down as his MJ-versus-the-Jazz moment.
It’s very very rare that LeBron James is both playing at his peak and not the best player on the floor. Durant is accomplishing just that. Sorry, Steph, your insane stat-line of 28.7 PPG, 9.7 RPG, and 9.0 APG, and 2.0 SPG is somehow not good enough.
ORIGINAL PROP
Odds to have highest scoring game in the series
LeBron James: 5/2
Steph Curry: 7/2
Kevin Durant: 4/1
Kyrie Irving: 11/2
Klay Thompson: 10/1
Kevin Love: 40/1
FIELD: 28/1
VERDICT
LeBron’s 39 in Game 3 is the leader in the clubhouse.
ORIGINAL PROP
Odds to make the most 3-pointers in the series
Steph Curry: 3/2
Kyrie Irving: 13/2
Klay Thompson: 13/2
Kevin Love: 11/1
LeBron James: 11/1
Kyle Korver: 15/1
JR Smith: 15/1
VERDICT
No surprise here: Curry’s 15 are four better than Durant and five better than Klay. No one on the Cavs has hit more than seven through three games.
ORIGINAL PROP
Over/Under most 3-pointers by one player in a single game: 6.5
VERDICT
Klay came oh-so-close to hitting the over in Game 3, draining six. It looked like he might smash it after nailing four in the first quarter, but he only went 2-of-6 the rest of the way.
ORIGINAL PROP
Over/Under average margin of victory in the series: 8.5 PPG
VERDICT
The first two in Oakland were 19 and 22-point laughers. Even after a tight Game 3, the average margin is still crushing the over at 15.3.
ORIGINAL PROP
Odds to get the first technical foul in the series
Draymond Green: 2/1
Kevin Durant: 4/1
Tristan Thompson: 5/1
LeBron James: 11/2
David West: 11/1
Matt Barnes: 12/1
JaVale McGee: 12/1
Zaza Pachulia: 18/1
Tyronn Lue: 50/1
Mike Brown: 75/1
VERDICT
Finally, an upset! Sort of. Tristan Thompson and David West drew double-techs in Game 2, thus preventing heavy favorite Draymond Green from taking this prop. That said, he’s the only player in the series to pick up a tech on his own, which he did late in the first half of Game 3.
Never top Draymonding, Draymond.

Managing Editor
Sascha has been working in the sports-betting industry since 2014, and quickly paired his strong writing skills with a burgeoning knowledge of probability and statistics. He holds an undergraduate degree in linguistics and a Juris Doctor from the University of British Columbia.