No sharp line movements right now.
What is odds movement?
Odds movement is the change in a bookmaker's price for a match between when the market opens and kick-off. When a price shortens (drops), the market judges that outcome more likely; when it drifts (rises), less likely. Tracking that shift is one of the oldest reads in betting.
A sharp move on a short-priced favourite usually carries more signal than a big percentage swing on a longshot — which is why this radar weights a favourite shortening more heavily than an outsider drifting. We record real prices over time and surface the matches whose lines moved most before kick-off.
Movement is context, not a tip. A line can shift for many reasons — a key player ruled out, weather, or simply the weight of money — and we never claim to know which. Read it alongside form, head-to-head and the rest of the picture.
Odds movement FAQ
What does it mean when odds shorten?
The price has dropped, so the market now rates that outcome more likely than it did when the line opened.
Is a sharp move a guarantee?
No. Movement reflects how the market is pricing a game, not a certain result. It is one input among many, never advice.
Why do you weight favourites more?
A small move on a short price (e.g. 1.50 → 1.30) is usually a stronger signal than a large percentage swing on a 9.0 outsider, which is often just the mirror of the favourite shortening.