Run Line vs Overworked Starters
Bets the run line when the opponent has allowed more than 2.9 earned runs per game over their last 5 games with starters averaging over 89 pitches, while home runs allowed show consistent rather than volatile patterns.
Part of all MLB ATS system records.
When This System Fires
The system places a pick only when every one of these triggers holds true at game time.
Avg 5 Pitch Earnedruns
Avg 5 Pitch Pitchesasstarter
Std 10 Pitch Homeruns
TOTAL PICKS
486
HIT RATE
58.99%
RECORD
128-89
ROI
+12.61%
PERFORMANCE BREAKDOWN
128
217
89
WINS
TOTAL BETS
LOSSES
Related MLB ATS Systems
Underdogs in Mid-Total H2H Games
98-28 record · 77.8% hit rate
Dogs with Recent Fielding Errors
215-78 record · 73.4% hit rate
Dogs with Shaky Defense
215-78 record · 73.4% hit rate
Underdogs with Volatile HR Offense
218-82 record · 72.7% hit rate
Underdogs with Volatile Power
218-82 record · 72.7% hit rate
Frequently Asked Questions
Does the "Run Line vs Overworked Starters" MLB ATS system still work?▾
The system's live record is 128-89 (58.99% hit rate) with 12.61% ROI across 217 graded picks. Closing line value averages 0.00, meaning picks are consistently behind the sharpest closing price. Past performance doesn't guarantee future results — track it forward to confirm the edge persists.
When does the Run Line vs Overworked Starters system fire a pick?▾
The system triggers a MLB ats pick only when all 3 of its filter conditions are satisfied at game time. See the "When This System Fires" section above for the exact thresholds on each condition — the system waits for every trigger before placing a bet, which is why sample sizes are smaller than total games.
What is the sample size for the Run Line vs Overworked Starters system?▾
The system has been evaluated against 486 total qualifying games, with 217 of those reaching a graded outcome (wins + losses). Sample size matters — any system under ~15-20 graded picks is noise; 50+ is where a real edge shows statistical signal.