Skip to content
Categories NCAA

How to Bet on College Baseball: Strategy, Tips & Expert Advice

Updated June 23, 2024 | 7:53 am CDT by Isaiah Sirois

While NIL has clearly changed the landscape of college football and college basketball, college baseball has undergone some major changes, too. The 2023 College World Series saw record viewership, and with talented prospects able to get paid while pursuing college degrees and avoiding the minor leagues, that trend is likely to continue: players who would’ve left college baseball behind earlier in their careers are now sticking around. As the sport’s popularity continues to increase, the sportsbooks have started to get in on the action, too. Let’s talk about how to bet on college baseball as I dish out my tips, strategy and expert advice.

How to Bet on College Baseball: Strategy, Tips & Expert Advice

React App

How to Bet on College Baseball: The Logistics

How to Find College Baseball Markets

It can be a bit tricky to spot college baseball markets at your sportsbook. If you can search by sport, there will usually be a tab for either “College Baseball” or “NCAA Baseball” under the baseball tab.

If you cannot, sometimes clicking the “MLB” tab will reveal that book’s other baseball offerings, which usually include NPB, KBO and the minor leagues.

The season runs from mid-February to mid-June, so if you’re looking at a different time of year, you may not have much luck.

What College Baseball Bets Can You Place?

In almost all cases, college baseball betting markets are limited to the moneyline, run line and total. You won’t be able to get player props or inning-by-inning bets, and often, it’ll just be the moneyline.

A variety of futures markets can spice up your action. You’ll usually be able to bet on the eventual winner of the next College World Series year-round. Some sportsbooks will post lines for teams to make it to the College World Series, or the Elite Eight in March Madness .

During the college baseball tournament, you’ll also find futures for teams to advance out of their “Regional” and “Super Regional” groups. These can be a nice source of value since you’re not subject to the variance of just one game — even if your team loses once, they’ll have more chances to advance.

Regionals, the first round of the tournament, are four-team double-elimination tournaments hosted by one of 16 national seeds. Although they’ll play in their home stadium all series, the team designated as the “home” team will rotate, which is an important thing to follow for game betting.

One team will advance to “Super Regionals” from the four-team Regional pool. Also called “Supers,” this is the second round of the college baseball tournament (and equivalent to the Sweet 16). Teams will play in a best-of-three series where the host is the home team in Games 1 and 3. The winner advances to the College World Series in Omaha.

How to Bet on College Baseball: Strategy, Tips & Expert Advice

Know the Meta | College Baseball Betting Strategy

If you’re new to college baseball, you must learn the meta if you want to be a profitable college baseball bettor. Here are a few questions you should be asking yourself about every game before you even start thinking about the teams taking the field:

Who is at home?

Home-field advantage is more significant in baseball than in other sports because the home team will always get to bet last. While sportsbooks will do their best to designate the correct team as the “home” team, you shouldn’t blindly trust that the team in what you’re used to as the “home” spot at your sportsbook is actually the “home” team — or, you know, is even playing at their home stadium.

Where are the teams playing?

At the start of the regular season, as is sometimes the case in college basketball, teams will often play tournaments in random locations. This practice is especially prevalent in college baseball because the season starts in February, which isn’t exactly great for playing baseball in the Midwest or Northeast.

When are the teams playing?

Yes, you need to pay attention to the calendar when betting on college baseball. If it’s a Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday or Monday, you’re probably betting on a weekend series — but there are exceptions. If it’s a Tuesday or Wednesday, you’re probably betting on a weekday standalone game.

What’s the difference? For one, teams usually build their pitching rotations around the weekend schedule, and if anyone is going to get a day off, it’ll usually be for the weekday game. If a series starts on Friday, a team will usually use its ace that game (hence the term “Friday starter”) before using its second-best arm on Saturday, and so on.

For another, conference play usually begins in mid-March, and teams will then spend almost all of their weekends until the conference tournament playing different conference foes in weekend series with mid-major opponents spliced in between.

If you bet on a high-profile team to win a weekday game, you may not get all the batters and pitchers you would’ve seen on the weekends, and that can have consequences in the box score.

What part of the schedule are we in?

Most of the rules I laid out above are true for the entire season, but there are exceptions. For example, since conference tournaments start in the middle of the week, teams may not have their Friday starters ready to go for their first or second games.

Another exception is that during Regional tournaments, host teams may choose to save their Friday starters for their second game, trusting a secondary arm to get the job done against a shaky automatic qualifier.

Know the Batting Order | College Baseball Betting Strategy

Only once you understand the context surrounding the college baseball game you’re thinking about betting on should you start to evaluate the teams at hand. That’s because, unlike with professional baseball, college baseball lineups are more fluid, and the LSU you’re getting on a Tuesday will often differ from the LSU you’re getting on Friday.

While I still value cumulative team and player stats, it can be helpful to think about them in of “weekend” and “weekday” numbers. Here are my two quick tips for understanding a team’s batting order:

Pay Attention to Team OPS

The key stat for me as a college baseball bettor is on-base plus slugging (OPS). It gives us a ton of insight into how many baserunners a team is generating and how effective they are at getting multiple bases at a time.

In 2024, six of the top eight teams by OPS were hosts at the Regional level. All of them advanced to Supers, where all but one of them again served as a host. Four then advanced to the College World Series.

Those top-eight teams all boasted an OPS in the high-.9s, which may sound like a ton in MLB , but know that most college baseball totals range from between 11.5 to 15.5.

… and Player OPS

Unlike the MLB, which features 30 teams and a maximum of 270 batters starting on a given night, college baseball features hundreds of teams and thousands of batters. It’s impossible to know every player’s numbers, but it’s pivotal to understand the outlier performers that power their teams’ success.

Because there are so many players in college baseball, the range of talent is incredibly wide. Batting orders will commonly feature future MLB starters alongside future used car salesmen, so it’s important to understand when a team has a truly game-changing performer and when a team has a balanced order.

In 2024, the Georgia Bulldogs had two of the national leaders in OPS, Charlie Condon and Corey Collins, both of whom were above 1.3 in the metric (Condon was above 1.5!) Without those two, Georgia wouldn’t have been a top-eight offense in the metric, and if either got a night off or were hurt, you’d be betting on (or against) a very different Georgia team.

Georgia’s season ultimately came to an end in Supers. In the finale, Condon and Collins combined for one hit, one walk and two HBPs across 10 plate appearances. The top-heavy Bulldogs didn’t get enough out of their other players to win the series.

Don’t forget about splits!

College baseball stats aren’t as well tracked (or as widely available) as MLB stats, but for teams in major conferences, you can almost always find batting splits. These are extra important in college baseball as handedness matters a ton — some teams may only have righty bats while others have a better distribution.

Let’s stick with the Georgia example. The Dawgs recorded a team OPS of around 1.05, but that dipped into the .9-range against lefties — and shot into the 1.1-range against righties. You should have some sense as to whether a team you’re considering is set up for success against the opposing pitcher.

Summer leagues matter, too

While the MLB is year-round, college baseball is just a spring sport. Players will often play in summer leagues when they’re not in class, and these are especially important to understand player development.

While some summer leagues are better than others, strong play can suggest improvement, while poor play can suggest a player was feasting against bad competition. Players who pop off in the Cape Cod League are generally reliable targets in the NCAA, especially batters, since it’s a wooden-bat league.

Notable standout performers in 2023 that played well in 2024 include Seaver King, who parlayed his 1.021 OPS into a roster spot at Wake Forest and MLB draft hype, Travis Bazzana, who led Oregon State to a Supers appearance behind his astounding 1.479 OPS, and Texas A&M stars (and future first-round picks) Braden Montgomery and Jace LaViolette.

React App

Know the Pitching Staff! | College Baseball Betting Strategy

If you’re used to the MLB, you’re probably used to knowing the starting pitcher. The book may even list it on their site and offer “listed pitcher”-specific markets. Well, that’s a luxury you won’t often get in college baseball. So how should you adjust?

Try to Figure Out the Starter

The first step when evaluating a pitching staff is to, you know, actually try to figure out the starter. Team social media s can be a good source, but they’ll rarely post the information early enough in the day for you to have an edge.

Team beats and student newspapers can be a more efficient source. If you’re placing bets close to first pitch or later in the weekend, Friday Starters may have the information you need.

Know the Starter’s (or Team’s) RA9 and WHIP

I’m a bit weird when it comes to pitcher stats in college baseball. Lots of people talk about ERA but I care more about RA9, or runs allowed per nine innings. Because college baseball stats are more limited in scope — and because fielding is generally worse — RA9 paints a more accurate picture of what we can expect to happen.

Errors are less variance and more to be expected, and if a pitcher has a far higher RA9 than ERA, you shouldn’t expect their fielders to suddenly learn how to play defense. The opposite is true, too — if a pitcher’s RA9 and ERA are close to the same, you can probably expect their fielders to keep delivering.

I like WHIP (walks and hits per inning pitched) a lot at the college level as well. While coughing up baserunners isn’t a total death sentence in the MLB, unreliable fielders and aluminum bats can make them much more of an issue.

If you can’t identify the starter, you can approximate by using a team’s overall RA9 and WHIP. This isn’t an ideal solution, however, and if it’s your only option, consider sitting that game out or wagering less than usual.

Don’t Forget About the Bullpen!

While some stud pitchers at the college level will throw multiple complete games in a season (looking at you, Derek Clark), most will have to exit at some point, and games can swing in an instant when they do.

You don’t need to know the stats of each possible reliever, but you should probably know the bullpen’s numbers. You can find bullpen ERA (which you can also filter to just weekend or weekday numbers for a better picture) at Friday Starters.

OddsShopper’s Sports Betting Tools & Tips

New to sports betting">OddsShopper !

Categories NCAA
College Baseball Odds, Pick & Prediction Today: Saturday, June 22
NASCAR Cup Series Odds, Picks & Predictions for the USA Today 301 at New Hampshire (2024)
Isaiah Sirois

Author

Isaiah Sirois

Isaiah Sirois is a sports betting analyst at OddsShopper specializing in basketball, football and motorsports. Basketball is Isaiah’s favorite sport to handicap, and he has covered NBA, WNBA, NCAA and FIBA markets for OddsShopper and other sites. However, Isaiah’s favorite sport to follow is auto racing, and you can usually find him watching NASCAR or IndyCar on Sundays. He will be a fan of Team Penske and Ford Performance until the end of time. Isaiah graduated with a bachelor’s degree in history from Emory University and briefly attended Vanderbilt Law School before dropping out to work at OddsShopper.

Next Story

Why the Sportsbooks Hate You When You Actually Start Winning

Trending & Related

College Baseball Odds, Pick & Prediction Today: Saturday, June 22

College Baseball Odds, Pick & Prediction Today: Sunday, June 16

College Baseball Odds, Pick & Prediction Today: Friday, June 14

Betting 101

Why the Sportsbooks Hate You When You Actually Start Winning

What is Portfolio EV? Guide to +EV Sports Betting

Sports Betting Software Showdown: Which Tool Is Right for You?

3 Betting Mistakes That Portfolio EV Catches Instantly (And How It Fixes Them)

Sports Betting Resources

  • Positive EV NFL Bets
  • Expert NFL Picks
  • Live NBA Odds
  • Positive EV NBA Bets
  • Expert NBA Picks
  • Live NFL Odds
  • NFL Parlay Calculator
  • Positive EV MLB Bets
  • Expert MLB Picks
  • Positive EV College Football Bets
  • Expert College Football Picks

Featured Articles

Why the Sportsbooks Hate You When You Actually Start Winning
May 20, 2025 2:17 pm | Dave Loughran
What is Dinger Tuesday? How to Beat FanDuel’s Promotion
May 20, 2025 2:10 pm | Isaiah Sirois
Get a 7-DAY FREE TRIAL Of Portfolio EV Today!
May 20, 2025 10:12 am | Sam Smith
How Portfolio EV Built My NBA Bankroll from $100 to $1,200
May 16, 2025 7:11 am | Greg Ehrenberg
You Don’t Need to Be a Genius to Beat the Books — Just the Right Tools
April 26, 2025 8:15 am | Dave Loughran
NBA Playoffs Are Heating Up — And Portfolio EV s Are Cashing In
April 22, 2025 3:02 pm | Sam Smith

Related Articles

Sports Betting Without Knowing the Sport: How Market-Based +EV Betting Can Beat the Books
May 22, 2025 2:37 pm | Sam Smith
The Portfolio EV Lab Just Got a Massive Data Upgrade
May 20, 2025 2:47 pm | Sam Smith
Why the Sportsbooks Hate You When You Actually Start Winning
May 20, 2025 2:17 pm | Dave Loughran
What is Dinger Tuesday? How to Beat FanDuel’s Promotion
May 20, 2025 2:10 pm | Isaiah Sirois
What is Portfolio EV? Guide to +EV Sports Betting
May 20, 2025 10:07 am | Sam Smith
Sharp vs. Soft Sportsbooks: How to Spot the Difference and Find the Best Value Bets
May 19, 2025 3:09 pm | Sam Smith

Sports Betting Without Knowing the Sport: How Market-Based +EV Betting Can Beat the Books
May 22, 2025 2:37 pm
Underdog Fantasy Pick’em Predictions Today: Anthony Edwards (May 22)
May 22, 2025 1:07 pm
PrizePicks, DraftKings Pick6 & Underdog Cheat Sheet: Best More/Less Picks Today for NBA & MLB (May 22)
May 22, 2025 10:40 am
Best ParlayPlay Promo Code Today
May 22, 2025 6:57 am
Best Sleeper Promo Code Today
May 22, 2025 6:56 am
Best Underdog Promo Code Today
May 22, 2025 6:56 am
Best Vivid Picks Promo Code Today
May 22, 2025 6:56 am
The Portfolio EV Lab Just Got a Massive Data Upgrade
May 20, 2025 2:47 pm
Why the Sportsbooks Hate You When You Actually Start Winning
May 20, 2025 2:17 pm
What is Dinger Tuesday? How to Beat FanDuel’s Promotion
May 20, 2025 2:10 pm

How Can I Find the Best Sports Betting and DFS App Bonuses?

If you're a new sports bettor, it's hard to know where to start. In fact, it's simpler than it seems, because there are use OddsShopper's Free Bet Converter to maximize your beginning bankroll

Get a bonus code for BetMGM

Get a promo code Caesars Sportsbook

Best DraftKings Promo Code

Get a promo code for DraftKings

Use a promo code for FanDuel

Claim a promo code for PrizePicks

Get a promo code for UnderDog

the ranks of the OddsShopper Hall of Fame

  • Free Expert Picks

    • Free NBA Picks
    • Free MLB Picks
    • Free NFL Picks
    • Free NHL Picks
    • Free NCAAB Picks
    • Free NCAAF Picks
    • Free Golf Picks
    • Free UFC Picks
    • Free EPL Picks
    • Free Tennis Picks
    • Free WNBA Picks
  • Positive EV Bets

    • Positive EV NBA Bets
    • Positive EV MLB Bets
    • Positive EV NFL Bets
    • Positive EV NHL Bets
    • Positive EV NCAAB Bets
    • Positive EV NCAAF Bets
    • Positive EV Golf Bets
    • Positive EV UFC Bets
    • Positive EV EPL Bets
    • Positive EV Tennis Bets
    • Positive EV WNBA Bets
  • Betting Tools

    • Arbitrage Opportunities
    • Parlay Builder
    • PrizePicks Entry Builder
    • Underdog Entry Builder
    • Sleeper Entry Builder
    • Free Bet Converter
  • Articles

    • All Articles
    • NBA Articles
    • NFL Articles
    • NCAAF Articles
    • MLB Articles
    • PGA Articles
    • NHL Articles
    • NASCAR Articles
    • MMA Articles
  • Betting Calculators

    • Expected Value Calculator
    • Hold Calculator
    • Parlay Calculator
    • Odds Converter
  • Live Odds

    • Live NBA Odds
    • Live MLB Odds
    • Live NFL Odds
    • Live NHL Odds
    • Live NCAAB Odds
    • Live NCAAF Odds
    • Live Golf Odds
    • Live UFC Odds
    • Live EPL Odds
    • Live Tennis Odds
  • Sportsbook Promo Codes

    • BetMGM Bonus Codes
    • Bet365 Bonus Codes
    • FanDuel Promo Codes
    • DraftKings Promo Codes
    • Caesars Promo Codes
    • BetRivers Promo Codes
    • Sleeper Fantasy Promo Codes
    • Underdog Fantasy Promo Codes
    • Betr Picks Promo Codes

    • Us
    • of Use
    • Stokastic
OddsShopper Logo
© 2024 Stokastic.All Rights reserved.
This site contains commercial content, We may be compensated for the links provided on this page. The content on this page is for informational purposes only. OddsShopper makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the information given or the outcome of any game or event. Please play responsibly. Only customers 21 and over are permitted to play. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem and wants help, call 1-800-GAMBLER.