Sharp money signal in Arizona Diamondbacks at Seattle Mariners: Seattle Mariners has 69% of bets but only 35% of the dollars.
| Market | Side | Bet % | Money % | Odds |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moneyline | Arizona Diamondbacks | 31% | 65% | +130 |
| Seattle Mariners | 69% | 35% | -150 | |
| Run line | Arizona Diamondbacks +1.5 | 41% | 31% | -170 |
| Seattle Mariners -1.5 | 59% | 69% | +155 | |
| Total | Over 7 | 97% | 97% | -130 |
| Under 7 | 3% | 3% | -120 |
Arizona Diamondbacks at Seattle Mariners is one of the strongest sharp-money signals on tonight's MLB slate. On the moneyline market, 69% of bets are on Seattle Mariners but only 35% of the dollars — a 34-point gap between bet count and money share that ranks among the largest divergences in the slate.
That gap is the cleanest sharp-money tell we have. When the bet count and dollar share point in different directions, the dollars are coming from fewer, larger checks — the kind of bets that distinguish high-volume, professional action from the public crowd. Books rarely give back this much line value on a casual mistake; the price you're seeing is what the market thinks of the divergence in real time.
None of this is a pick. It's where the money is landing — you decide what to do with it. See how we calculate splits →.
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Bet% is the share of tickets wagered on a side. Money% is the share of dollars. They diverge when one side draws bigger bets per ticket than the other.
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Public favorites still win plenty of games — they are usually the better team. Where the public underperforms is against the spread on big-name teams in nationally televised games.
A 10-point gap is the threshold we treat as noise vs. signal. 15+ points is meaningful — it usually means the average bet on the money side is materially larger than on the public side.
We don't issue picks. The splits show what the public and the money are doing — use them to inform your own read of the game.
Sharp money is wagering activity from sophisticated, high-volume bettors. It shows up as a money percentage that exceeds the bet percentage on the same side — bigger checks per ticket on the contrarian view. See our methodology →
How we track public bets and money — see our methodology →
Last updated: May 30, 2026 at 7:26 PM UTC
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