EdgeDetector.ai sports analytics
What is closing line value?
Learn what closing line value means, why CLV matters, how to track it, and why it should be treated as a research signal rather than a guarantee.
Closing line value in plain English
Why CLV matters more than one result
How to track CLV safely
Closing line value compares the number recorded when a decision was made with the final market number before an event starts. It can be a useful process metric because it checks whether a user found a better number than the closing market. CLV is not a guarantee and should be reviewed over a meaningful sample.
EdgeDetector.ai is built for sports fans who want a cleaner way to inspect player prop data before making a decision. The product focuses on NBA and MLB analytics, including recent form, season baselines, matchup context, signal quality, model history, and transparent record keeping. Each page in the app has a specific job: the edge feed surfaces daily statistical outliers, the comparison tools help users evaluate two players side by side, the matchup view adds context around opponent and game environment, and the pricing page explains what is available before and after upgrade. The platform is not a sportsbook and does not place wagers. It is an analytics workspace for finding discrepancies between a player's baseline and current signal, then reviewing that signal with enough context to understand why it exists. Users can start with free access, inspect current edges, compare player trends, and review public performance records before deciding whether the paid tier is useful for their daily workflow. Good sports research needs more than a single projection number. EdgeDetector.ai is organized around the questions users ask while preparing for a slate: which players are moving away from their baseline, which signals are supported by enough data, which matchups deserve caution, and which records can be checked after the fact. The app keeps those details close to the page where the user needs them, so a crawler and a reader can both understand that the product covers player prop analytics, comparison workflows, matchup context, pricing, and public model accountability. This static summary is served before the JavaScript app loads, which helps search engines and lightweight audit tools understand the page purpose. When JavaScript runs, the full interactive EdgeDetector.ai application replaces this summary with live controls, current feeds, account features, and product-specific data.