Mean vs Median in Player Props | Why Averages Don't Beat the Line
Definition
Mean vs Median: Why Lines ≠ Averages in sports betting sportsbook lines behave like medians, not means. This distinction changes how you evaluate every prop.
Think of it this way
Like household income statistics: the "average" American household income is $100K+ because billionaires pull it up. The median is $75K — a much more useful number for understanding the typical household.
Mean vs Median: Why Lines ≠ Averages
Here's a mistake almost every beginner makes: "His average is above the line, so I should bet the over."
This logic is wrong. Here's why.
The Key Distinction
- Mean (average): Add up all values, divide by count. Pulled up by outlier games.
- Median (middle value): The 50/50 point. Half of games are above, half below.
- Sportsbook lines behave like medians — they're set at the point where roughly half the outcomes go over and half go under.
Why This Matters: Right-Skewed Distributions
Most player stats are right-skewed: they're bounded at zero but can spike in outlier games.
Real Example: A Wide Receiver
Consider a WR with these last 10 receiving yard games:
12, 35, 42, 48, 55, 58, 62, 78, 95, 165
- Mean (average): 65.0 yards
- Median: 56.5 yards
- Line: 52.5 yards
His average is 65 — well above the 52.5 line. Bet the over, right?
Wrong. He goes UNDER 52.5 in 4 of 10 games (40%). But those four "under" games are clustered close together (12, 35, 42, 48), while his "over" games include a huge 165-yard outlier that inflates the average.
The line is set where roughly half the outcomes land on each side — closer to the median. The mean gets pulled up by explosive games that happen rarely.
The Histogram View
Imagine plotting games on a chart:
Under 52.5: ████ (4 games — tight cluster)
Over 52.5: ██████ (6 games — wide spread including outlier)
The four "under" games are clustered between 12-48. The six "over" games spread from 55 all the way to 165.
The average lies about the typical game. The median tells you the truth.
This Applies to Every Sport
| Sport | Example |
|---|---|
| NBA | A scorer averaging 22 PPG with a 45-point explosion pulling the mean up. Line is set at 20.5. |
| NFL | A QB averaging 250 passing yards with a 400-yard game. Line is 235.5. |
| MLB | A pitcher averaging 7.5 Ks with an occasional 12-K gem. Line is 6.5. |
What This Means for Your Process
- Don't compare averages to lines — Compare median performance to lines
- Look at distributions — How often does the player actually clear the line, not just on average?
- Outlier games deceive — One 40-point game can make a 20 PPG scorer "average" 22 over 10 games
How DMP Uses This
DMP's projections account for distribution shape, not just averages. When we calculate P(over), we model the actual distribution of outcomes — including skewness.
The line isn't asking "What's his average?" It's asking "What's the 50/50 point?" Those are different questions with different answers.
How DMP uses this
DMP projections model the full distribution of outcomes, not just the mean. This is why our P(over) calculations account for skewness.
Common mistake
Seeing that a player's average is above the line and assuming the over is a good bet. The average is inflated by outlier games that happen rarely.
After this lesson
You understand why sportsbook lines are closer to medians than means, and you stop using averages to evaluate props.
Apply These Concepts in Real Betting Markets
The DumbMoneyPicks app scans thousands of player prop lines to find potential +EV opportunities and role shifts caused by injuries.
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