Most betting trends you'll see online come from memory. Somebody remembers a team hitting Overs, checks a few box scores, rounds up, and posts it. The window is whatever makes the number look best. The line is whatever it was when the poster last looked. Receipts are not included.
We built a machine so we'd never have to trust anyone's memory, including our own.
The database
Every day, all season long, we log the odds board: every player prop, every team market, every game, with the lines and prices attached. Overnight, our grading engine checks each one of those markets against what actually happened on the field. Win, lose, or push, every market gets a grade, and every grade gets stored.
Do that daily, across a full sports calendar, and it compounds fast. The database holds more than 100,000 graded props, and it grows every single morning. That's the asset everything on this site is built on: not opinions about games, but a graded history of what every market did.
What "graded" actually means
A graded record is the opposite of a hot take. It has 3 parts: the exact market (Under 1.5 Total Bases, not "he's been quiet"), the exact line at the time, and the actual result. When one of our boards says a hitter has cleared his number in 9 of his last 10, that's not a vibe. Those are 10 specific games our engine graded, and we can point to every one of them.
The rules a trend has to pass
Plenty of real records still don't deserve your attention, so everything that makes our pages clears 4 filters:
- The window is honest. No cherry-picked endpoints, no shopping for the cut that makes 12 of 19 look like a heater.
- The streak is current. A run that died last Tuesday is trivia, not a trend.
- The market is named exactly. Hits + Runs + RBI is not Total Bases. You should never have to guess what the record describes.
- It's checked against today's line. A trend built at one number gets rechecked against the number you can actually bet, every morning.
That's also why you'll see us flag the awkward stuff: one-game samples labeled as exactly that, counterpunch angles that cut against the board, and streaks we note are carried by circumstances that might not repeat. The same grading that finds a streak is what tells us the moment it dies.
What we don't do
We don't sell picks. We don't post cumulative win-rate brags built from wins-only screenshots. And we don't pretend a record is a prophecy: every number we publish describes the past, and none of them guarantee the future. We surface the exact market, the honest record, and today's price. The read is yours to make, and our EV calculator will price any quote you're weighing.
In a corner of the internet full of locks and legends, showing the whole board is the differentiator.
Where the database shows up
The MLB daily trend board is rebuilt from a fresh grading run every morning of the season, with the game-day team and player-prop articles going deeper on each slate in the articles hub. New to any market we track? The betting terminology guide covers all of it.
And the next thing we're building runs on the same engine: the Wager Sharp AI assistant, which will answer questions about tonight's slate straight from the graded database. Not vibes. Records. It's coming soon to the homepage.
The database doesn't care about narratives, hot names, or what everybody's saying. That's the whole idea. 21+ and please gamble responsibly.

