Hello, Line Gap
Why we built a +EV research platform for the rest of us — bettors who want a sharp's workflow without the spreadsheets.
There's a small group of people who consistently make money betting on sports. None of them are doing it from gut. All of them are doing some version of the same thing: pricing every market themselves, comparing their fair price against what the books offer, and acting only when the gap is in their favor.
That workflow has been locked behind spreadsheets, scrapers, and Discord servers for a long time. We built Line Gap to put it in front of every bettor who's serious enough to use it.
What the product actually does
- +EV scanner that prices every market against our model and surfaces the lines where the book is paying you more than the true probability says it should.
- Live line shopping across every major US book — best price, surfaced in the same row.
- Research Lab with hit rates, splits, matchup data, and player trends — confirm or skip in seconds, not tabs.
- CLV tracking that automatically logs the closing line for every bet you take, so you find out whether your process is actually beating the market.
That's it. No tipping service. No Discord lock-ins. No "lock of the day." Just the math.
What we believe
Three convictions baked into every screen:
- Edge is in price, not picks. Anyone telling you what to bet is selling you something. We tell you when a price is wrong.
- CLV is the only honest scoreboard. Win/loss lies. We make CLV the metric you actually live by.
- The toolkit should be one product. Bouncing between five tabs to make one bet is how you miss the gap. We put the workflow in one place.
What's next
This is post one. The plan from here:
- A weekly write-up on what the +EV board surfaced and why.
- Tactical pieces on bankroll, CLV, hit-rate research, and the meta-game of how books move lines.
- The occasional unsexy reminder to stop chasing.
If you're new here, the best thing to do next is open the +EV board and watch it for a session. Most of the value of the product reveals itself the second you see how often the books disagree on the same market — and how much money is sitting on the table waiting for someone to take the better price.
See you on the next post.