An MLB tool focused on home runs, park factors, weather, and batter-vs-pitcher matchups. We built BallBet, so this is a biased source — but an honest one. Here's the fair read.
It pioneered accessible park-factor and weather context for home-run betting, and that focus made it popular with HR bettors.
BallBet covers the same park and weather ground, then adds the model layer on top: HR DNA scores each hitter's home-run signature against tonight's specific pitcher, park, rest, and month, and the model outputs win probabilities and edges across home runs, hits, total bases, and strikeouts — not home runs alone. Public calibration and a backtest show how those numbers have actually performed.
Want a simple home-run-and-weather view? BallParkPal does that well. Want HR DNA, full prop coverage, and model probabilities you can check against a public backtest? BallBet.
BallBet covers the same park and weather ground, then adds the model layer on top: HR DNA scores each hitter's home-run signature against tonight's specific pitcher, park, rest, and month, and the model outputs win probabilities and edges across home runs, hits, total bases, and strikeouts — not home runs alone. Public calibration and a backtest show how those numbers have actually performed. Want a simple home-run-and-weather view? BallParkPal does that well. Want HR DNA, full prop coverage, and model probabilities you can check against a public backtest? BallBet.
BallBet's core is its own MLB model: every prop is a win probability and edge from a matchup-aware simulation, with HR DNA (a per-batter home-run signature against tonight's pitcher, park, rest, and month) and a batter-vs-pitcher overlay that uses pitch-type splits rather than raw head-to-head. Model calibration and a backtest are public.
BallBet has a free tier, plus paid Pro and Edge plans for the deeper tools. See the pricing page for current plans.