Player Prop Tracker
Quick Answer
A player prop tracker records the player, stat, line, price, sportsbook, bet time, closing line, result, and reason for every prop. The point is not only to know wins and losses. It is to learn which sports, markets, prices, and bet types are actually working.
What A Player Prop Tracker Should Capture
Track the sport, league, player, team, opponent, market, line, odds, book, stake, result, closing number, and the reason for the bet. For PropsBot users, the reason matters. A rebound prop created by injury news is different from a strikeout prop created by matchup, or a CS2 kill prop created by map context.
The tracker should also keep source context. Was the bet tied to a model edge, a projection mismatch, an odds-shopping gap, a stale prop, or a late lineup change? That note is what makes review useful later.
Why Closing Line Matters
Closing line value is not a perfect scorecard, but it helps measure process. If a player prop was bet at 6.5 and closed at 7.5, the bettor probably beat the market even if that single bet lost. If the line consistently moves against the bettor, the process may be too late or too dependent on stale information.
Prop Tracking By Sport
WNBA props need minutes, usage, and injury context. KBO props need lineup spot, pitcher matchup, and weather. Tennis props need surface, serve profile, and match length. UFC props need fight path, round expectation, and method market context. eSports props need map, draft, role, and series format. A good tracker lets those notes live next to the number.
How To Use PropsBot With A Tracker
Use player props today to find the candidate, odds shopping to check the number, and track record to review outcomes. The tracker closes the loop between the pick, the price, and the result.
Player Prop Tracker FAQ
What should a prop tracker include?
It should include player, market, line, odds, sportsbook, stake, result, closing line, and the reason for the bet.
Why track the reason for the bet?
The reason shows whether the edge came from price, projection, role, injury news, matchup, or market timing. That is how future decisions improve.
A player prop tracker is only useful if it records more than wins and losses. Props need the number, price, book, reason for the bet, and ideally the closing line. Without that, the record can flatter or punish the wrong thing.
PropsBot should use this page to explain the tracking layer behind a better prop workflow. The goal is not to collect screenshots. The goal is to learn which markets, sports, and prices actually hold up.
What To Track For Player Props
- Opening and bet line: the number matters as much as the side.
- Odds: -115 and +105 are different bets even when the stat line matches.
- Reason: role, matchup, injury news, market movement, or model signal.
- Closing line: CLV can show whether the process found good prices.
Use track record, player props today, closing line value, and odds shopping together.
Good tracking also protects against memory bias. Bettors remember the clean wins and the bad beats, but the useful pattern is usually quieter: which sports get good prices, which prop types move against you, and which picks were forced.
Player Prop Tracker FAQ
What should a prop tracker include?
It should include the player, market, line, odds, sportsbook, reason, result, and closing number when available.
Why track the reason for the bet?
Because the result alone does not tell you whether the original read was sound or just lucky.
Tracker Columns That Matter Most
The most useful tracker columns are not complicated. Record the opening line when available, the line you bet, the closing line, the book, the stake, and the result. Add one short note for the edge: injury, matchup, role change, stale price, odds gap, or model projection. That note keeps the log useful months later.
Segment results by sport and market. WNBA assists, UFC method props, tennis aces, KBO strikeouts, and CS2 kills should not be reviewed as one pile. Each market has different timing and different ways to go wrong. A tracker should show where the process is strongest.
What To Review Weekly
Review closing-line value, average odds, hit rate by market, units by sport, and whether losses came from bad prices or normal variance. If the tracker shows good prices but poor short-term results, the answer may be patience. If it shows poor prices, the answer is usually better timing or better odds shopping.
Using A Tracker To Improve Timing
A tracker should show whether the best prices are being taken early enough. If the same props keep closing worse than the entry, the issue may not be handicapping. It may be timing, book selection, or waiting too long after the model flags the play.