← Back to today's reads

Strategy · Tuesday, June 30 · 6 min read

Line shopping is not a hobby — it is the entire job

Half a point on every NFL spread, over a season, is the difference between break-even and clear profit. Most players never put in the seven minutes a day it costs.

Three sportsbooks open. Take the side you already like and look at the price on all three. The worst that happens is they're tied. The best that happens is one is sitting half a point off the consensus number. That half point, on the right side of three or seven in football, is worth roughly twenty cents in vig over time.

Multiply that by the number of bets in a season. The number is large. The number is also boring — which is why it doesn't get done. Line-shopping is the only edge in this entire ecosystem that requires zero analytical skill and is available to everyone. The reason most players don't capture it is that the work is small and constant, and there is no story to tell when it works.

More from today

NBA5 min

Back-to-back fatigue and the spreads that quietly punish it

Della Quinn

UFC5 min

Main-card reads: which prices the market is mispricing tonight

Tyrese Brennan

Pro wrestling5 min

Storyline reads: how this week's go-home show is shaping the title picture

Sasha Reyes