Free NHL analysis, priced by the Optimus II model. Read a full sample breakdown below, then start your first 7 days free.
Start 7 days free 7 days free on the Foundation plan · One pick a day · Money-back guarantee on EliteHockey rewards discipline more than almost any sport. The NHL runs 32 teams through an 82-game regular season, so there is volume all winter — but it is also low-scoring and variance-heavy, and that combination punishes anyone who chases results and rewards a strict, model-led staking plan.
The single biggest reason hockey is beatable is that the market still leans on surface stats while the game has moved on. Modern analytics — expected goals, shot-share, goals saved above expected — describe what is actually happening on the ice far better than wins, goals and save percentage alone. That gap is where value lives.
Above all, hockey is a goaltending sport. A confirmed starter, and how well that goalie is truly stopping the puck, can swing a line more than any skater. Our Optimus II model prices each game from these inputs first, then checks the sportsbook for the mispricing — especially on the puck line and totals.
No tips out of thin air. Every call comes with the reasoning, the data behind it and a clear stake.
Today we take the run line on the Dodgers. The moneyline is priced too short, but Dodgers −1.5 makes sense given the mix of home advantage, an evening start, and a clear gap between the starting pitchers.
On the Rockies’ side, Michael Lorenzen takes the mound with a weaker profile this year: 3–9, a 6.91 ERA and a 1.81 WHIP. Against him stands Justin Wrobleski at 10–2, 2.80 ERA and 1.01 WHIP — a gap not only in record, but in baserunners allowed.
The Statcast contact data is telling too: opponents generate a 46.5% Hard-Hit rate and a .399 wOBA against Lorenzen, meaning quality contact happens often. Against a strong Dodgers lineup, that favours a multi-run margin rather than a narrow win.
The risk is yesterday’s extra-innings game, which may have taxed the Dodgers’ bullpen. Even so, at 1.813 the run line looks like better value than the short moneyline.
Placeholder example, shown to illustrate our format — swap for a real NHL analysis. Not a live tip or a guaranteed result. 18+.
Where the value tends to hide, and how each market actually works.
Which team wins, including overtime and the shootout. Because hockey is low-scoring, even clear favourites rarely reach the short prices you see in other sports.
Hockey’s standard handicap. The favourite at −1.5 must win by two; the underdog at +1.5 is a popular, safer play that covers even in a one-goal loss or an empty-net finish.
Usually set around 6 to 6.5. Goaltending form, pace, and both teams’ defensive structure drive whether a game goes over or under.
Markets on one period — often the first — let you target strong starts, rest situations or specific matchups without the full 60 minutes of variance.
A skater’s shots on goal or points, or a goalie’s save total. Prop lines are frequently softer than the main markets.
A three-way market including the tie, settled at the end of regulation. It removes overtime and shootout randomness from the result.
The inputs our model weighs before it ever looks at the sportsbook’s price.
A confirmed starter, save percentage, and goals saved above expected (GSAx). No single input moves a hockey line more than who is in net and how well they are playing.
A team on the second night of consecutive games tires and often rests its starting goalie. That schedule spot is one of the most reliable edges in the sport.
Raw shots mislead; xG weighs where and how chances are generated, giving a truer read on which team controlled play.
A hot power play or a leaky penalty kill can decide tight games. PP% and PK% are core inputs, especially against undisciplined opponents.
Territorial control — the share of shot attempts a team drives — is a strong predictor of future results, often ahead of the standings.
Time-zone travel, days off, and injuries to a top defenceman or goalie all shift a projection before puck drop.
Reading markets well is a full-time job. This is the discipline behind every pick.
Pricing the outcome independently keeps our estimate free of the bookmaker’s anchor — and that gap is where the value shows up.
A firm grip on emotion is everything. The edge only shows over a long horizon, so we never deviate from the method — especially the staking.
Bookmakers price the result. We weigh how the game actually played out — the gap between the two is where a trend and value hide.
After a run of misses, unless the reads are clearly wrong, we stay disciplined. Variance is simply the price of a long-term edge.
Win or lose, each settled pick gets reviewed. That recap sharpens the next read and stops us trusting false value twice.
Our whole team does this full-time — that’s how we stay quick enough to react the moment the lines move.
One high-conviction pick a day, across the leagues where the data runs deepest.
Your first 7 days are free on the Foundation plan. One high-conviction pick a day — cancel renewal anytime.
Switch up anytime — the remaining days of your lower plan carry over as bonus credit.
There is free NHL analysis to read, and your first 7 days on the Foundation plan are free — a full 7-day trial of the daily picks before you pay anything.
Mainly moneyline, puck line and totals, with period and prop markets where the model sees value. Every pick includes a unit stake and a minimum-odds line.
Critical. We wait on confirmed goalie news wherever possible, because an unexpected backup can completely change a game’s projection and the fair price.
Yes. Schedule spots — especially the second night of a back-to-back and long road trips — are built into the model and often drive our reads.
Once the key situational information, including probable goalies, is available. The pick lands in your member area and you get an email.
Get one high-conviction NHL pick a day — fully analysed, with a clear stake. First 7 days free.
Start 7 days free