Arbworld | Dropping Baseball Odds
Live Data
Volume share on outcome
Odds highlight
Favorite (lowest odds)
| Date / Match | 1 | 2 | Volume / Links |
|---|---|---|---|
May 4, 23:06 Baltimore Orioles — New York Yankees | ▲ 2.943.1 | ▼ 1.491.46 | |
May 4, 22:41 Toronto Blue Jays — Tampa Bay Rays | ▲ 2.082.12 | ▼ 1.891.87 | |
May 4, 23:41 Cincinnati Reds — Chicago Cubs | ▼ 2.942.84 | ▲ 1.51.53 | |
May 4, 22:41 Boston Red Sox — Detroit Tigers | ▲ 3.03.05 | = 1.481.48 | |
May 4, 23:41 Cleveland Guardians — Kansas City Royals | ▲ 2.12.12 | ▼ 1.881.87 | |
May 4, 21:41 New York Mets — Colorado Rockies | ▲ 1.71.75 | = 2.282.28 | |
May 4, 23:46 Milwaukee Brewers — St. Louis Cardinals | = 1.941.94 | ▲ 2.042.06 | |
May 4, 22:41 Philadelphia Phillies — Miami Marlins | ▼ 1.971.96 | ▲ 2.02.02 |
Dropping odds in baseball occur when a team’s moneyline payout drops significantly after opening. This downward line movement is never random—it’s a powerful signal that the market, driven by heavy sharp money betting volume and late info, believes that specific outcome is highly probable. Note: market signals such as odds drops and Moneyway percentages are indicators, not certainties — they can reflect fluctuations, public money, or deliberate bookmaker traps. Sharp money can be wrong, and sport always holds surprises.