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Home - Baseball Betting Baseball Betting Profits
You really need to factor OPS in baseball betting for profits
this season. For a more detailed look we turn it over to Matt
Fargo. When looking at baseball statistics, on-base percentage and slugging
percentage are two very powerful numbers to look at. Putting them
together and we get a combined statistic termed OPS. It’s nothing fancy
but it can be a very useful tool when handicapping. Hitting home runs is
nice but getting on base and knocking them around produces even more
runs and that is the ultimate goal to winning. A team with a solid OPS
will give you a lot of runs and a better chance of winning.
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As of May 12th, the Toronto Blue Jays lead the Majors in OPS at .850
while the Chicago Cubs are last at .681. That is a vast difference and
understanding how those numbers translate to wins and losses is the goal
in terms of handicapping. Obviously, the higher the OPS, the more likely
you will see a higher number of runs scored. There are exceptions
however. Milwaukee is 7th in the league in OPS but only 16th in runs
scored. The Braves are 8th in runs scored but 18th in OPS. These are the
only two real extremes.
With the designated hitter in the American League, it comes as no
surprise that the top five teams in the Majors in OPS are from there.
What is a surprise however is that of the seven teams with an OPS below
.700, four of those are from the AL. Seattle, Tampa Bay, Kansas City and
Los Angeles are the four squads and those four are also ranked 25th,
27th, 30th and 26th respectively in runs scored. The top five teams in
OPS are also ranked in the top 10 in runs scored with Detroit (9th)
being the only team outside the top five.
How can this help us in handicapping? It’s pretty straightforward
actually. There are eight teams in all of baseball that have an OPS
higher than .800 and six of those have shown profits through the first
35 or so games the season. Only Cleveland (.848 OPS) and Milwaukee (.807
OPS) are in the red. In total, those eight teams are a combined +25.7
units on the season which is extremely impressive this early in the
season. Keeping it up throughout the entire year is the challenge.
The seven teams that are below .700 in OPS have not fared well against
the moneyline this year. Those seven teams are a combined -37.1 units on
the season with Tampa Bay and San Diego being the only two teams showing
a profit from that group. That profit is not that big as the Devil Rays
and Padres are a combined +1.6 units on the year. Blindly betting on or
against these two groups is not the way to go about it since other
factors do need to be taken into consideration before pulling the
trigger.
OPS affects total plays as well. The theory is that teams with a high
OPS generally score more runs thus their games would go over more often
than not. That theory holds true through the early part of the season as
those eight teams with an OPS of .800 or greater are 147-116 over (55.9
percent). The opposite effect of a lower OPS leading to fewer runs and
lower totals does not hold true however. The bottom seven teams with an
OPS of .700 or less are just 113-122 under (48.1 percent) showing that
those teams have some poor pitching to go along with their poor offense.
Adding OPS to your handicapping arsenal will give you some excellent
information to look at will no doubt increase your profits in the long
run. Best of luck and wager wisely..
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