97% of bets are on Los Angeles Dodgers in Colorado Rockies at Los Angeles Dodgers — heavy public lean on a July 7, 2026 matchup.
| Market | Side | Bet % | Money % | Odds |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moneyline | Colorado Rockies | 3% | 3% | +210 |
| Los Angeles Dodgers | 97% | 97% | -235 | |
| Run line | Colorado Rockies +1.5 | 6% | 2% | +105 |
| Los Angeles Dodgers -1.5 | 94% | 98% | -118 | |
| Total | Over 10 | 96% | 97% | -124 |
| Under 10 | 4% | 3% | -113 |
Colorado Rockies at Los Angeles Dodgers is one of the slate's lopsided public plays. 97% of the bet count on the moneyline market is sitting on Los Angeles Dodgers — the kind of one-way lean that usually shows up on a name-brand team in a high-profile primetime slot, not a coin-flip matchup.
The money side tells a slightly different story: 97% of dollars on Los Angeles Dodgers versus 97% of tickets. That's a small gap by itself, but in the context of a 90%+ public bet count, even a few points of money lag suggests the average bet on Colorado Rockies is materially larger. Books price these games knowing the public is coming — the line builds in the lean — which is why heavy public favorites historically underperform their implied win rate against the spread.
None of this is a pick. It's the snapshot of how money is landing on this game right now. See how we calculate splits →.
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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.
We aggregate publicly reported sportsbook handle on a sub-hourly cadence. See our methodology page for the full breakdown.
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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.
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.
When 70%+ of bets land on one side, the line builds in some of that lean — so the public favorite is rarely a value bet, even when it's the better team. Watch where the money lands relative to the bet count. See our methodology →
How we track public bets and money — see our methodology →
Last updated: July 7, 2026 at 1:40 AM UTC
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