Modest split in San Francisco Giants at Miami Marlins — San Francisco Giants draws 24% of bets, 10% of money.
| Market | Side | Bet % | Money % | Odds |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moneyline | San Francisco Giants | 24% | 10% | +125 |
| Miami Marlins | 76% | 90% | -142 | |
| Run line | San Francisco Giants +1.5 | 10% | 2% | -165 |
| Miami Marlins -1.5 | 90% | 98% | +146 | |
| Total | Over 8 | 93% | 81% | -105 |
| Under 8 | 7% | 19% | -130 |
San Francisco Giants at Miami Marlins has a modest split worth noting on the moneyline market. 24% of bets are on San Francisco Giants, with 10% of dollars on the same side — a 14-point gap. It's a small edge, not a top opportunity, but it's a directional signal in the same direction as a real sharp-money tell.
Splits in the 10 to 15-point range are common — most games on most nights land in this band. It's not nothing, and it's not enough on its own to override the price. The money side here is Miami Marlins if the gap matters. The public side is the one the line is built around. Most professional bettors don't act on a split this size in isolation; they use it as one input among several.
It didn't make tonight's top opportunities for that reason. See how we rank the slate →.
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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.
When the bet count and the dollars don't agree, the dollars usually carry the sharper signal. A {gap}pp gap means the average bet on San Francisco Giants is smaller than the average bet on the other side.
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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.
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.
A 10-point gap between the share of bets and the share of dollars on a side is the threshold we treat as meaningful. 15+ points usually means the average bet on the money side is materially larger — that's where sharp money lives. See our methodology →
How we track public bets and money — see our methodology →
Last updated: June 21, 2026 at 9:28 AM UTC
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