Verified performance without cherry-picking

The performance page publishes the complete official-pick record instead of selecting only favorable leagues, markets, tipsters, or dates. Every settled result stays in the record, including losing periods, pushes, voids, and samples where closing-line value was not available. This makes recent outcomes easier to inspect without presenting a short streak as proof of long-term skill.

Readers can compare seven-day, thirty-day, ninety-day, season, and all-time windows. Return on investment, hit rate, profit, average closing-line value, and sample size are shown together because no single metric explains performance on its own. Period filters change the view, but they do not delete rows from the underlying official history.

How the record stays accountable

How to interpret the metrics

ROI compares settled profit with the total settled stake, while hit rate compares wins with graded decisions. CLV describes how the published price compares with a suitable closing reference when one exists. Each value must be read with its sample size, collection coverage, and market context. A positive hit rate can still produce a negative return, and a positive CLV sample does not guarantee the next result.

The full history table provides the audit trail behind every summary. It keeps the date, event, selection, odds, stake, result, profit, tipster, source reference, and integrity hash available for review. The methodology and data-sources pages explain how publication, settlement, and verification fit together so readers can reproduce the checks instead of trusting an isolated headline number.

More detailed tables, filters, and navigation become available after the interactive app finishes loading.