Moneyline
Moneyline
The simplest and most popular form of sports betting, and why it’s more complex than it looks
📘 Definition
A Moneyline bet is the most straightforward wager in sports betting: you pick which team or player will win the game or match. There are no point spreads to cover, no totals to consider—just a simple “who wins?” proposition.
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If your team wins → you win the bet.
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If your team loses → you lose the bet.
In the United States, this market is always called the Moneyline. In Europe, the equivalent is simply called the match winner market, often seen as a 2-way bet (when no draw is possible, such as in tennis or basketball) or a 3-way 1X2 bet (in soccer, where draws are allowed).
While it appears simple, the Moneyline is actually a core market for both casual and professional bettors, because it directly expresses each team’s implied probability of winning.
🧮 Structure
Moneyline bets come in several forms depending on the sport and format of the odds:
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Two-Way Moneyline
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Common in basketball, tennis, baseball, NFL.
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Only two possible outcomes: Team A wins or Team B wins.
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Three-Way Moneyline (1X2)
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Common in soccer, hockey, and some tournament formats.
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Three possible outcomes:
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1 = Home team wins
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X = Draw
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2 = Away team wins
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American Odds Format
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Positive odds (e.g., +200) = underdog.
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Negative odds (e.g., -150) = favorite.
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Example: -150 means you must risk $150 to win $100. +200 means a $100 bet returns $200 profit.
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Decimal Odds (Europe)
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Example: 2.50 = implied probability of 40% (1 ÷ 2.50).
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Fractional Odds (UK)
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Example: 5/2 = implied probability of 28.6%.
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🎯 In Practice
The Moneyline is the foundation of betting because it is intuitive. But bettors at different levels approach it differently:
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Casual Bettors
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Usually back favorites because they “just want their team to win.”
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Often ignore value and implied probabilities.
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Professional Bettors
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Constantly compare bookmaker odds to their own probability models.
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Seek underdogs where the implied probability undervalues the true chance of winning.
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Examples:
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NFL: Patriots -250 vs Jets +200. Betting the Patriots requires risking $250 to win $100. Betting the Jets means risking $100 to win $200.
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NBA: Lakers -140 vs Celtics +120. Close matchups often priced around this range.
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Soccer (1X2): Bayern 1.40, Draw 4.20, Dortmund 6.50. Three-way odds reflect draw possibility.
🔢 Example Bet
Suppose you bet on the Celtics at +120 for $200.
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If Celtics win → you collect $440 total ($240 profit).
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If Celtics lose → you lose your $200 stake.
Now imagine betting on the Patriots at -250 with $250:
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If Patriots win → you win $100 profit.
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If they lose → you lose $250.
This illustrates the tradeoff between favorites and underdogs: small returns with high probability vs big returns with low probability.
💸 Pros and Cons
| ✅ Advantages | ❌ Disadvantages |
|---|---|
| Easy to understand for beginners | Heavy favorites require big risk for small profit |
| Universally available in every sport | Underdogs lose more often, leading to long losing streaks |
| Transparent expression of winning chance | Three-way markets (soccer) carry higher margins |
| Core betting market with high liquidity | Casual bettors overpay for favorites |
💡 Strategy Tips
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Convert odds to probabilities
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Always check implied probability vs your own estimate. A +200 underdog implies ~33.3% win chance. If you believe their chance is 40%, that’s value.
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Avoid overpriced favorites
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Laying -300 (1.33 decimal) can be a losing long-term strategy if the true probability is lower than 75%.
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Shop for odds
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A difference between +120 and +130 can add significant value over time.
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Consider Draw No Bet in soccer
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Mitigates risk of a tie when betting on underdogs.
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Track line movement
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Sharp bettors often influence Moneyline odds early in the week for NFL and NBA.
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Hedge when appropriate
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Futures positions often hedged using Moneyline bets in semifinals and finals.
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📊 Best Use Cases
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NBA & NFL: Highly liquid Moneyline markets, sharp and efficient but full of opportunity with injury news.
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MLB: Pure Moneyline market with no point spread, key for baseball bettors.
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Tennis: Moneyline is the main betting market since no draws exist.
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Soccer: 1X2 Moneyline is the world’s most bet market.
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MMA & Boxing: Almost exclusively Moneyline wagers, with occasional prop extensions.
⚠️ Common Mistakes
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Betting only favorites: Many casual bettors bleed bankroll slowly betting short prices.
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Ignoring underdog value: Underdogs win more often than most bettors think.
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Not accounting for draws: Especially in soccer, where 25–30% of games end tied.
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Forgetting to compare odds: Taking 1.85 instead of 1.95 on a Moneyline adds up to huge lost value.
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Bankroll mismanagement: Overbetting on favorites leads to large losses on single upsets.
📌 Summary
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|---|
| What it is | Simple bet on which team or player wins |
| Format | 2-way (NBA, NFL, tennis) or 3-way (soccer, hockey) |
| Why it matters | Core market with highest liquidity |
| Risks | Overpriced favorites, high bookmaker margin on 3-way |
| Best for | Beginners and professionals seeking pure win probability bets |
| Best practice | Convert odds to probability, shop lines, look for underdog value |