MLB Betting Standings
ML • RL • Totals • Home/Away/Fave/Dog 2026 Season
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> MLB team betting records for all 30 teams -- overall, home, away, as favorites, as underdogs and pick'em records across moneyline, run line and over/under. Last 10 games shown for current form. Toggle between ML, RL and Totals views. Updated each morning.
TEAM
GAMES
OVERALL
HOME
AWAY
AS FAVE
AS DOG
PK
L10
NYY
24
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
Gerrit Cole
New York Yankees
322
11
11
11
11
11
11
Gerrit Cole
New York Yankees
322
11
11
11
11
11
11
Home/Away Splits: The Number That Matters More Than Overall Record
Most bettors glance at a team's overall record and move on. That's a mistake in baseball, where the home/away split often tells a completely different story than the aggregate. Teams that play well at home and struggle on the road -- or vice versa -- create exploitable patterns that the market doesn't always full price in.
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A team with a 55% overall ML win rate but a 65% home record and a 44% away record isn't a 55% team. It's two different teams depending on the park. I break those splits out for all 300 franchises because that's how I actually bet -- and if you're not checking home/away before placing a side bet, you're leaving context on the table.
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The run line and totals splits follow the same logic. Some teams cover the RL at home at elite rates but can't cover on the road. Some teams consistently go over at hitter-friendly parks and under in pitcher-friendly ones.
Fave vs. Dog Records -- When To Fade The Favorite
MLB has more line movement variance than any other sport, which means the gap between a team's true win probability and their ML price is constantly shifting. The fave/dog split in this table shows how teams actually perform when money says they're supposed to win -- and when they're not expected to.
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Some teams are terrible favorites. They get heavy action from square bettors, the line inflates, and they cover at a rate well below what the price implies. Other teams are dangerous underdogs -- they punch above their weight at plus-money prices because their lineups are built for low-scoring, grind-it-out games that the market undersells.
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My rule: if a team is below 50% as a favorite across a meaningful sample, I'm at a minimum not adding them to parlays as the chalk. If a team is above 55% as a dog over 30+ games, they're worth serious consideration every they're listed with a plus sign.
The L10 Column Is The Most Actionable Number On The Page
Season records are useful context. The last 10 games are what's actually relevant to tonight's bet.
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The L10 column shows each team's ML record in their most recent 10 games. A team that's 8-2 in their last 10 is playing at an entirely different level than their season record might suggest -- and sportsbooks are often slow to fully adjust lines to reflect current form. A team that's 2-8 in their last 10 is in freefall, and betting their next game at season-average prices is buying a falling knife.
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I check L10 first when I'm on the fence about a side bet. If the team I'm considering is green (6+ wins in last 10) and their opponent is red (4 or fewer), that convergence often pushes me off the fence. If both teams are cold or both are hot, I pass or look harder at the totals and run line instead.
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The color coding on this page makes it immediate: green is hot, amber is middling, red is cold. Scan the L10 column before you look at anything else.
Related Reports
MLB Live Betting Report -- situational records: checkpoints, scoring first, SP exit splits
MLB Underdog Betting Stats -- pitcher-level dog records updated daily
MLB Probable Pitchers -- tonight's starters with team and NRFI records attached