We have another pair of games around the NBA on Monday, with Game 2 of the Bucks/Nets series followed up by the opening game of the Nuggets/Suns series to cap the night off.
Speaking of “PrizePicks” in general, it is a creative new way to parlay picks based on expected fantasy point production. To dive into the ins and outs of everything PrizePicks, FTN’s Tyler Loechner wrote a comprehensive App Review.
How to Play PrizePicks NBA
For the sake of this NBA article, the format is simple.
You pick two, three, or four players and predict whether or not they will go over or under their projected fantasy point total, or their single-stat total. The single-stat totals can be chosen from points, assists, rebounds, or three-pointers made.
When parlaying the players, the larger your parlay, the better the payout:
- Two-pick entry pays 3x (max entry: $400)
- Three-pick entry pays 5x (max entry: $200)
- Four-pick entry pays 10x (max entry: $100)
As a bonus offer, there is a “flex play” option. This provides an added level of security on your entry where you can decrease your multiplier received if you miss one of your entries but hit on all of the others.
The NBA slate locks at 7:50 PM ET.
An important note – these lines can shift over the course of the day leading up until lock. The lines that I am quoting are at the time of writing (Friday morning). I will be in the PrizePicks discord channel (which is FREE!) up until lock to help out with how to adjust to the changing projections.
Scoring breakdown for PrizePicks contests can be found here.
NBA PrizePicks for today
Here’s a look at my favorite PrizePicks for Monday, June 7:
- Giannis Antetokounmpo (33.5 points) – OVER
- Jrue Holiday (19.5 points) – OVER
- Chris Paul (13.5 points) – OVER
- Giannis Antetokounmpo (12.5 rebounds) – OVER
- Brook Lopez (5.5 rebounds) – OVER
- Khris Middleton (4.5 assists) – OVER
- Monte Morris (4.0 assists) – OVER
Favorite combination
-
Jrue Holiday (o19.5 points), Chris Paul (o13.5 points)
Power play payout: 3x
Flex play payout: 2x for two correct, 0.5x for one correct