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Multiple “Seasons” of Baseball

Table of Contents

This week’s newsletter will hit a few topics:

  • A framework for betting baseball I found thoughtful

  • Updates on my “summer schedule” for both this publication, and my betting overall

  • Quick check-ins on next week’s stream and the Reel National Championship

  • Bet of the Week

Let’s get after it.

 

MLB Betting Isn’t One Season

For background: my baseball fandom has drifted as I’ve grown up and had less free time, so I rarely find baseball bets of my own.

Jascon Scavone’s piece on betting baseball, however, resonated with me and I wanted to summarize key themes for readers.

He breaks the season down into three segments and espouses betting early season and late season.

Here’s the breakdown:

Early season (April-May):
This is the softest part of the MLB calendar.

Weather is the first reason. April and May can swing hard by city and by day, and those changes matter for run environment and totals.

The second reason is readiness: pitchers are usually ahead of hitters early, while bats are still finding timing.

That leaves more uncertainty around workloads, pitch counts, lineup experiments, and even how the ball is carrying.

And with books also splitting attention across the NBA and NHL playoffs, this is the stretch where mispriced lines are most likely to show up.

Midseason (June-July 30):
This is the cleanest and usually toughest stretch to beat.

Weather becomes more stable across the country, hitters and pitchers are fully in rhythm, managers settle into more predictable lineup patterns, and the market has a much better read on teams.

As the air warms and pressure changes, the ball tends to carry better, so scoring environments also become more consistent and totals adjust upward.

Just as important, MLB is basically the main show for bookmakers at this point, so they are devoting close to full attention to baseball. Less uncertainty means fewer obvious mistakes.

Attention shifting to the World Cup may distract the books a bit this year, but this is the least optimal time to find good baseball bets.

Late season (July 31-September):
This is where the market gets weird again, just in a different way than spring.

The trade deadline happens on July 30 and can immediately change rosters. After that teams stop behaving like they all want the same thing.

Contenders push for wins, fringe teams juggle urgency and fatigue, and bad teams start evaluating younger players.

Expanded rosters on September 1 are smaller than they used to be, but motivation, rest, prospect call-ups, and role changes still make this stretch noisy.

Even better – NFL season pulls public and bookmaker attention away from baseball.

So while late season is messier to handicap, it can also reward bettors who stay focused while everyone else moves on.

 

On The Juice – Summer Schedule

I’m slowing the writing and betting cadence a bit over the next few months with fewer sports on the board and some travel planned.

I still want to stay in touch with the community, so over the next four months expect some mix of:

  • Live streams

  • Podcast/Video content

  • Get togethers

  • Betting competitions

Come mid-August, I’ll resume writing these every Thursday with football and basketball around the corner.

In short: expect 1–2 newsletters per month, at least one on World Cup betting, some other betting media over the summer, and a return to weekly sends as we ramp into NFL.

 

Live Stream Update

As I mentioned a couple weeks ago – Juice Reel introduced the ability to livestream and interact with audience questions within the app.

For real this time, next week, I’m planning to 1) open up a free trial for new subscribers, and 2) run a livestream next Thursday 4/16.

My planned agenda is:

  • Overview of how I trade prediction markets with a focus on limit orders.

  • Ways to use AI to find potential betting angles.

  • Live Q&A from attendees

Look out for specific details next week.

 

The Reel National Championship Update

My journey sadly ended in the Final Four.

I lost to eventual champion Catch22 (Congrats!) when Illinois struggled against UConn and there were few other betting opportunities Saturday to make up ground.

This was a fun event, and if you’re looking for someone to tail, even with a low unit size, Catch22 is only $2 per week, so give the champ a look!

 

 

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