How the Doctor reads a slip
A checkup is a second opinion, not a prediction. The Doctor doesn’t sell picks and never promises a win — it stress-tests the slip you already built, shows you the sources it read, and grades the risk it found. Every claim in a report is either cited or labeled as a model’s read; nothing is a guarantee. What you do with it is yours.
The ten systems
Every checkup runs your slip through ten diagnostic systems, each with ten sub-checks — a hundred distinct reads per slip.
- 01
Individual Player Analysis
Usage, role stability, recent efficiency, and whether the prop line fits how the player is actually being used.
- 02
Multi-Player / Team Chemistry
How legs on the same roster interact — lineup continuity, usage overlap, and shared game script.
- 03
Opponent Matchup
Scheme and personnel fit against this specific opponent: pace, pressure, and where the defense is weak.
- 04
Team Form & Recent Performance
Rest-adjusted recent efficiency and scoring trends, with an explicit eye for regression.
- 05
Win/Loss Streaks & Momentum
Streaks, letdown and bounce-back spots, schedule density, and how the market has already reacted.
- 06
Injury / Lineup / Weather / News Risk
Official injury designations, lineup clarity, weather exposure, and late-scratch risk.
- 07
Odds Value / Market Movement
Price versus a fair range, line movement, book consensus, and where sharp money splits from public money.
- 08
Parlay Correlation Risk
How legs move together — correlation, leg-count penalty, and payout versus true combined risk.
- 09
Historical Trends / Head-to-Head
Head-to-head and situational history, with sample-size warnings so a thin trend never reads as proof.
- 10
Volatility / Prop Stability
Outcome distribution, floor/ceiling gap, and sensitivity to blowouts and garbage time.
How evidence is ranked
Every source in a report carries a trust badge, so you always know what kind of evidence is behind a claim:
- Verified
Official league sites and major stat references — primary sources, weighted heaviest.
- Reputable
Established betting and fantasy industry outlets and sportsbooks — credible, professionally edited.
- Model
Produced by an AI model rather than fetched from the web — clearly labeled so you never mistake a model’s read for a citation.
- Community
Crowd-sourced chatter and forums — useful for sentiment, weighted lightest.
What each scan depth does
Quick Check
A fast structural read: the slip parsed leg by leg, all ten systems graded, light research. One model, one pass, results in seconds.
Smart (Deep Scan)
Live web research on every leg, plus a panel of independent models on the most contested checks. Where they disagree, an adjudicator model weighs the evidence and rules.
Deep (Deep Scan)
A wider panel — three proposer models — escalating a larger share of checks, with conflicts routed through deeper adjudication before anything reaches the verdict.
Elite (Deep Scan)
The heaviest stress-test the Doctor runs: the widest escalation, the full three-model panel, the deepest adjudication reasoning, and a forced third voter on the final verdict.
What the grades mean
Every report lands on a five-band triage scale. The grade describes the slip’s structure as the evidence stands — it is a risk read, never a prediction:
- Healthy — the structure holds up across systems; what risk remains is the irreducible kind.
- Stable — sound overall, with a few identified soft spots worth reading.
- Caution — real symptoms across multiple systems; the report shows which legs drive them.
- Elevated — the structure is working against the slip in several places at once.
- Critical — the checkup found serious structural problems, explained leg by leg.
What we can’t know
Injuries break late. Lines move after we read them. Models disagree — that disagreement is information, and we show it instead of hiding it. No amount of research removes the variance from a sporting event, which is why every report shows its confidence and its sources instead of making promises. Anyone who tells you otherwise is selling something we refuse to sell.
For the full responsible-use policy, see responsible use & terms.