Sharp money signal in Cincinnati Reds at San Diego Padres: San Diego Padres has 73% of bets but only 39% of the dollars.
| Market | Side | Bet % | Money % | Odds |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moneyline | Cincinnati Reds | 27% | 61% | +116 |
| San Diego Padres | 73% | 39% | -132 | |
| Run line | Cincinnati Reds +1.5 | 42% | 46% | -185 |
| San Diego Padres -1.5 | 58% | 54% | +170 | |
| Total | Over 8 | 84% | 80% | -120 |
| Under 8 | 16% | 20% | -110 |
Cincinnati Reds at San Diego Padres is one of the strongest sharp-money signals on tonight's MLB slate. On the moneyline market, 73% of bets are on San Diego Padres but only 39% 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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Look for 15+ point gaps where the money is on the unpopular side. Those are the games where the average bet size is doing the talking.
We aggregate publicly reported sportsbook handle on a sub-hourly cadence. See our methodology page for the full breakdown.
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.
In our season-to-date sample, the side with more money than bets covers slightly more than half the time. The edge grows with the size of the bet/money gap.
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.
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: June 8, 2026 at 6:24 PM UTC
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