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Push (Betting Term)

Push (Betting Term)
When a wager neither wins nor loses, and how sportsbooks handle it


📘 Definition

A Push occurs in sports betting when the final result of a wager lands exactly on the sportsbook’s posted line. In this case, the bet is graded as neither a win nor a loss, and the bettor’s original stake is refunded in full. A push is essentially a tie between bettor and book.

Pushes most often happen in point spread and totals (Over/Under) markets when the margin of victory or total points equals the number set by the sportsbook. Moneyline bets never result in pushes, since they only involve win/loss outcomes (except in rare cases where rules dictate ties).

Example:

  • NFL spread: Chiefs -3.0 vs Jets +3.0.

  • Final score: Chiefs 27, Jets 24 → Chiefs win by 3 exactly.

  • Both sides push, stakes refunded.


🧮 Structure

Pushes occur in several contexts:

  1. Point Spread Bets

    • Line: -7.0.

    • Team wins by exactly 7 → push.

  2. Totals (Over/Under)

    • Line: 45.0 points.

    • Game ends with 45 points → push.

  3. Asian Handicaps

    • Built to include push scenarios. Example: +1.0 handicap → if team loses by 1, result is push.

  4. Player/Team Props

    • Example: QB passing yards line at 300.0. Final = 300 → push.

  5. Parlays and Teasers

    • If one leg pushes, most books drop that leg and recalculate odds for the rest of the parlay. Some treat pushes differently, so house rules matter.


🎯 In Practice

Pushes are common in certain sports and line types:

  • NFL: Key numbers like 3 and 7 are frequent push outcomes, since many games are decided by field goals or touchdowns.

  • NBA: With higher scoring, spreads rarely land exactly on the number, but totals sometimes do.

  • Soccer (Asian Handicap): Pushes are built into the format (e.g., +1.0, -1.0).

  • Baseball Totals: Over/Under 9 runs → game ends 5–4 → push.

For bettors, pushes are neutral—no money lost, no money won. For sportsbooks, pushes are neither revenue nor liability, but they disrupt handle balance.


🔢 Example Bet

Bet: $500 on Rams -6.0 vs Seahawks.

  • Final score: Rams 27, Seahawks 21.

  • Margin = 6 points.

  • Outcome: Push. Your $500 is refunded.

If the line had been -6.5, the Rams would have needed to win by 7 to cover, and your bet would have lost. That half-point difference (“the hook”) often determines whether a bet pushes, wins, or loses.


💸 Pros and Cons

✅ Advantages ❌ Disadvantages
Stake refunded, no loss No profit either—frustrating for bettors who felt “right”
Protects against exact outcomes Can ruin parlays if treated as loss by some books
Common in Asian Handicap (fair structure) Causes confusion for new bettors
Encourages use of half-points to avoid ties Refunds interrupt momentum for pros chasing volume

💡 Strategy Tips

  1. Prefer Half-Point Lines

    • Betting -2.5 instead of -3 avoids push outcomes. Books use hooks to eliminate pushes.

  2. Understand House Rules

    • Check how your sportsbook treats pushes in parlays and teasers. Some void, some recalc, some count as losses.

  3. Embrace Neutrality

    • A push is better than a loss. Treat it as protection, not frustration.

  4. Bet Early or Late for Hooks

    • Line movement often adds or removes half-points. Catching -2.5 instead of -3 changes push odds.

  5. Asian Handicap for Clarity

    • These markets explicitly build in push results, helping bettors plan expectations.


📊 Best Use Cases

  • NFL Spreads: Classic push scenarios at -3 and -7.

  • College Football Totals: Large scoring swings make exact-number pushes possible.

  • NBA Totals: With sharp lines, exact totals hit occasionally.

  • Soccer Handicaps: Pushes are integral, not incidental.


⚠️ Common Mistakes

  • Confusing push with loss: Some bettors think push = lost stake, when it’s refunded.

  • Not checking rules on parlays: Different books handle pushes differently.

  • Underestimating hooks: Ignoring half-points leads to unnecessary pushes and lost EV.

  • Chasing alternative lines without reason: Avoiding pushes by paying high juice doesn’t always make sense.

  • Emotional frustration: Treating a push as wasted effort instead of variance protection.


📌 Summary

Aspect Detail
What it is Bet result where final score equals the line, stake refunded
Where it happens Point spreads, totals, Asian handicaps, props
Impact Neutral result, no win/loss, bankroll unchanged
Risks Rules vary in parlays, hooks often decide outcomes
Best practice Target half-point lines, check sportsbook rules, accept pushes as variance
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