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Start 7 days free 7 days free on the Foundation plan · One pick a day · Money-back guarantee on EliteMajor League Baseball is arguably the most model-friendly sport there is. Thirty teams play 2,430 regular-season games across roughly six months, one of the largest samples in all of sport. Over that many games, luck evens out and a disciplined, data-driven edge has room to show up in the numbers rather than a lucky week.
Baseball is, at its core, a long sequence of one-on-one duels: pitcher versus batter, repeated hundreds of times a night. That structure is unusually well suited to statistical modelling, because each matchup can be estimated from deep, public data — and the results accumulate into a stable season-long signal.
It is also a pitching-led game. The identity and form of the starting pitcher shapes a huge share of the outcome, and pitching data is both rich and transparent. That is exactly the kind of edge our Optimus II model is built to exploit: pricing each game independently, then comparing to the sportsbook to find where a favourite is too short or a total is mispriced.
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.
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Where the value tends to hide, and how each market actually works.
The simplest MLB bet: which team wins. Heavy favourites are often priced short, which is why the run line frequently offers better value.
Baseball’s standard handicap. A favourite at −1.5 must win by two or more; an underdog at +1.5 covers even in a one-run loss. Pricing favourites on the run line is a core source of value.
A bet on combined runs, driven mostly by the two starters, the bullpens, the ballpark and the weather. Pitcher-friendly parks and strong arms push totals down; hitter’s parks push them up.
Settled after five innings, F5 markets isolate the starting pitchers from the bullpen — useful when a strong starter faces a shaky pen, or vice versa.
Markets on individual performance: a pitcher’s strikeout total, a hitter’s hits, total bases or home runs. Prop pricing is often softer than the main lines.
A bet on how many runs a single team scores, useful for isolating a favourable or unfavourable pitching matchup on one side of the game.
The inputs our model weighs before it ever looks at the sportsbook’s price.
ERA, WHIP, FIP and xFIP, plus strikeout and walk rates. The starter shapes more of a baseball game than any player in any other major sport.
A pen taxed by an extra-innings game the night before shifts late-game value and totals. Rested versus overworked relievers is a real, priceable edge.
Coors Field inflates runs dramatically; other parks suppress them. Dimensions, altitude and foul territory all feed the run environment.
In open parks the wind direction can add or remove a run of expected scoring; heat helps the ball carry, cold kills it.
Hard-Hit%, barrel rate and xwOBA reveal whether a pitcher’s results are earned or just noise waiting to correct — often before the market adjusts.
Handedness splits swing projections, and a confirmed lineup (rest days, call-ups) can move a total before first pitch.
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.
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Primarily moneyline, run line and totals, with first-5-innings and player props where the model finds an edge. Each pick includes a clear stake in units and a minimum-odds line.
Short-priced favourites frequently offer poor value on the moneyline. When our model projects a comfortable margin, the −1.5 run line can carry a much better price for the same read.
As lines settle and lineups are confirmed. The pick appears in your member area and we email you when it is added.
Yes. The method is the same in October, though we are selective — smaller slates mean fewer qualifying spots, and we never force a pick.
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