Closing line value (CLV) measures the price you got against the market's final price at kickoff. Beat the close consistently and profit follows; lose to it consistently and no hot streak will save you.
Why the close is the benchmark
The closing line is the market's most informed price — every injury report, every sharp bet, every model has weighed in by then. It's the best public estimate of the true probability that exists. If you took -3.5 and it closed -4.5, you got a better number than the market's final verdict. Do that hundreds of times and you are, definitionally, beating the market.
Why it beats your win-loss record
Variance makes records nearly useless over small samples. A coin-flip bettor goes 60-40 over 100 bets reasonably often; a genuinely sharp bettor goes 45-55 over the same stretch just as easily. CLV converges much faster, because it's measured against a number, not an outcome. It's the difference between grading the decision and grading the dice.
How to use it
Log the price you took and the closing price on every bet. Convert both to implied probability and track the average gap. Positive by even a point or two, sustained, is real. Big Mike grades his own picks on CLV alongside wins on [the public record](/picks-record) — because a record you can't audit is marketing, and CLV is the part that can't be faked by a lucky month.