All analysesVerdict: Lottery Ticket. Rating 69 out of 100. Grade B.
Ai
AiOddsLab
Bet365
69/ 100
Lottery TicketB
Fun-stake only — variance is loud
GET THE JOB DONE - Panama v Croatia
Looks interesting but we can't confirm a price edge. Treat as a small entertainment play, not a serious wager.
Your odds
+700
Fair odds
+616
Edge
—
Price bump+14%
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Ai
AiOddsLab
Strong Value conf.
Bet365
69/ 100
Lottery TicketB
GET THE JOB DONE - Panama v Croatia
Looks interesting but we can't confirm a price edge. Treat as a small entertainment play, not a serious wager.
Win probability — your price vs fair
+11.7% edge
Your odds imply12.5%
Fair line implies14.0%
$100 → your payout
$800
$100 → fair payout
$716
You gain
+$84
Your odds
+700
Fair odds
+616
Edge
+11.7%
Price bump +14%Grade BConfidence Strong Value
Graded vs the book's own price. Fair value devigged from Bet365's line — treat the edge as an estimate.
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AI breakdown
Verdict: This offering on a the matchup parlay against Panama has strong implied value at your price.
Value: The price of +700 represents an 11.73% edge against the devigged fair odds of +616, making this a high EV bet.
Market context: The offer of +700 is a significant increase (14.3% lift) from the original price of +600, indicating an improved value proposition.
Status: No notable injury signal.
Social: the matchup public social data for analysis.
Risk: This is a 4-leg parlay, inherently carrying multi-leg parlay variance.
Smart insight: the matchup overall dominance in Shots on Target and Corners is likely the most impactful factor driving value in this parlay.
Similar profile: This is a multi-leg parlay combining game props and team performance indicators, a profile often subject to significant price adjustments.
Counter-case: The "Croatia to Score in Both Halves" leg introduces significant variance, as scoring timing can be unpredictable.
Live context: the matchup lineups near tip-off.
Recommendation: Small
How this bet was graded
Grade B · 69/100 · Lottery Ticket
We graded GET THE JOB DONE - Panama v Croatia at +700 on Bet365 — a 4-leg ticket by comparing the offered price to a vig-free consensus of the wider market. The ticket centers on Croatia, Panama, Croatia and others. The bet earned a B grade (69/100), which we label "Lottery Ticket".
The headline number is edge versus fair: +11.73%. That figure is the long-run expected return per dollar staked, assuming the market consensus is an unbiased estimate of true probability. At odds this long, even a strongly positive edge cashes infrequently — single-bet variance dominates short samples. Because we couldn't fully match this market across other books, fair value here was derived from the host book's own posted line — treat the edge as directional rather than precise.
Fair odds calculation
Fair +616 · Implied 14.0%
Fair odds represent the price you'd see in a perfectly efficient, zero-margin market. To compute them we pull current prices from the available sportsbooks on the same market, strip out each book's vig, and average the resulting no-vig probabilities. The averaged probability for this outcome lands at 14.0%, which converts to fair odds of +616.
Compared to the offered price of +700 (a +14.3% move from the original line), that produces an edge of +11.73%. In plain English: if the market is right about the true probability, you'd expect to gain about 11.7 cents on every dollar staked, on average, across many bets of this exact shape.
Historical context
Big dogs (+500 to +1500) · Soccer · parlay
Across AiOddsLab's database, we've scored 869 graded Soccer bets, average edge of +4.18%, average rating 48/100.
Narrowing to the same market type, 367 graded parlay tickets, average edge of +3.12%, average rating 47/100. This is the closest apples-to-apples reference for the bet you're looking at.
Filtering by odds range alone (big dogs (+500 to +1500)), 194 graded tickets, average edge of +3.98%, average rating 44/100.
In the trailing 90 days, 869 graded Soccer bets, average edge of +4.18%, average rating 48/100. Compare that to the all-time baseline above to see whether grading and outcomes have drifted recently.
Stats update as new tickets are analyzed and graded. Sample sizes below 5 are suppressed.
Why the market may be wrong
A +11.7% edge implies Bet365 is pricing this outcome more generously than the field. That can happen for a few reasons: the book is using a promotional lift to attract action, the line hasn't caught up to a recent move elsewhere, or it's a low-limit market the sharper books haven't shaped yet. None of these guarantee the bet hits — they only suggest the price is on your side relative to consensus.
Frequently asked questions
What does a +11.7% edge mean?
Edge measures the gap between the price you're getting (+700) and the fair price implied by the broader market (+616). A positive edge of +11.7% means the offered price is paying more than the market thinks the outcome is worth. Over a long run of identical situations, that gap is your expected return per dollar wagered — though variance on any single bet is large.
Does a positive edge mean the bet is likely to win?
No. Edge and win probability are different things. The market still implies roughly a 12.5% chance this hits at the offered odds. A +EV bet is one that pays more than its true probability warrants — most +EV bets at long odds still lose individually. The edge only shows up across many similar wagers.
How are fair odds calculated?
Fair odds are derived by taking sportsbook prices on the same market, removing the bookmaker's vig (the built-in margin), and averaging the resulting no-vig probabilities. For this bet we used the available market price to estimate a true win probability of 14.0%, which converts to fair odds of +616. The offered price of +700 is then compared against that fair line to compute edge.
Why does this grade differ from the sportsbook's advertised lift?
Sportsbooks usually advertise the percentage lift over their own original price, which they set with house margin built in. Our grade compares the offered price to a vig-free market consensus, so a "+50%" advertised lift can still grade poorly if the original line was already inflated, and a small lift can grade well if it pushes a fair price into +EV territory.
Should I bet every bet that grades well?
Grading is a price-quality signal, not a guarantee. Even an B-grade bet can lose, and you should size stakes within your bankroll, account for correlation between legs, and consider your own information about the matchup. This tool helps you avoid bad prices — it doesn't replace judgment or responsible bankroll management.