Daily Parlay Picks (6/13/2026): 3-Leg World Cup + Tennis Parlay at +408

Glowing golden three-leg daily parlay picks bet slip with a soccer ball and tennis ball under stadium lights

Saturday’s daily parlay is a three-leg, all-day World Cup and tennis ticket priced at +408: Katie Boulter’s moneyline at Queen’s Club this morning, then Switzerland on the -1.5 handicap in the afternoon, and the Morocco vs. Brazil Under 2.5 to close the night. Combined odds land at +408, which is the books telling you this cashes a little under one time in five (their own number, vig included) in exchange for just over a 4x return if all three land.

Every leg is a position we already took in a full standalone writeup, so nothing here is a new opinion. What the ticket adds is structure: one stake, three results, settled by tonight. What it costs is fragility, because any single miss sinks the whole thing. The upside today is that only one leg needs a winning side at all: a moneyline, a handicap, and a total, rather than three coin-flip results.

Daily Parlay
3-Leg World Cup + Tennis Parlay
Combined Odds: +408
Saturday, June 13, 2026
$100 returns $408.26 in profit if every leg hits

The Ticket

Three legs in the order they settle: a grass-court moneyline at Queen’s Club, a World Cup handicap at Levi’s Stadium, and a World Cup total at MetLife. Each price is the number that leg’s standalone pick was carded at, drawn from the book consensus.

Daily Parlay · 3 Legs World Cup + Tennis · June 13
Katie Boulter Moneyline
Vekic vs. Boulter, Queen’s Club SF · 9:30 AM ET
-125
Switzerland -1.5 (Handicap)
Switzerland vs. Qatar, Group B · 3:00 PM ET
-149
Under 2.5 Goals
Morocco vs. Brazil, Group C · 6:00 PM ET
-145
Combined Odds
+408
Decimal
5.08
$100 Returns
$408.26
The +408 price implies roughly a one-in-five chance the full ticket cashes (the books’ own number, vig included, three independent results multiplied). One ticket, not three separate edges.
Leg prices reflect the consensus number each pick was carded at · A parlay is placed at one book, so your combined number will vary · Subject to change

Breaking Down the Legs

The short version of each leg’s case, in the order they settle. The full analysis lives in the standalone pick for each game.

Leg 1: Katie Boulter Moneyline (-125)

The ticket opens on grass at Queen’s Club, where Katie Boulter is in the middle of one of the best runs of her career, having reached the semifinal as the home favorite. Vekic is a dangerous lucky loser who has overachieved all week, which keeps this close to a pick’em, but the price and the home-crowd grass-court edge land us on Boulter. The full read on the surface fit and tournament trajectory is in our Vekic vs. Boulter pick. This is the early leg: it starts at 9:30 AM ET, so the whole ticket needs to be placed before first serve.

Leg 2: Switzerland -1.5 (-149)

Switzerland are a -475 moneyline favorite over Qatar, which is unplayable on its own, so the leg is the -1.5 handicap: the Swiss must win by two or more. A top-20 side with finishers like Embolo and Ndoye against a Qatar team that managed a single shot in its final warm-up is exactly the profile that produces a two-goal margin. The risk is the deep-block 1-0 grind, which our Switzerland vs. Qatar pick lays out in full. Kickoff is 3:00 PM ET at Levi’s Stadium.

Leg 3: Morocco vs. Brazil Under 2.5 (-145)

The anchor is a total, not a side, which is what makes it a clean parlay leg: it does not care who wins. Morocco conceded just two goals in eight qualifiers, Brazil are missing Rodrygo and Estevao with Neymar on the bench, and World Cup openers tend to be cautious. That combination points to a low-event night under three goals. The complete case, including the honest counterpoint about an early Brazil goal, is in our Morocco vs. Brazil pick. It kicks off at 6:00 PM ET at MetLife Stadium and is the last leg to settle.

Parlay Math, Honestly

Convert each leg to decimal and multiply: -125 is 1.80, -149 is 1.67, and -145 is 1.69, and the product is 5.08, which is +408 in American odds. Flip that around and the price says the ticket lands a little under one time in five. There is no model magic in that number: it is just the three prices stacked, vig and all. The structural quirk worth knowing today is that none of these three legs is a straight three-way soccer moneyline, so a draw does not automatically sink the ticket the way it did on some recent cards. Only the Switzerland handicap cares about the margin, and the Morocco leg cashes on any result with two goals or fewer.

Parlays are the sportsbook’s favorite product for a reason: each leg carries its own slice of vig, and multiplying legs multiplies the slices. Three legs is our ceiling for exactly that reason. If you want to see how fast the house edge compounds beyond that, our parlay betting guide has the breakdown, and the parlay calculator will price any alternate combination you would rather build from today’s card. For the wider World Cup picture, ESPN’s Group B guide covers the Switzerland leg’s context.

Stake sizing follows from that one-in-five: this is a small-ticket play with an analytical spine, not a position. A fraction of your normal single-game stake is right. The Rakhimova vs. Raducanu pick from this morning’s card was left off because Raducanu’s short price added almost nothing to the combined number while adding a fourth way to lose, and the Rodriguez boxing pick is a method bet that does not price cleanly as a parlay leg.

Every ticket gets graded after its last leg, win or lose. See our verified track record →

Play Safe: Gambling should be fun, not stressful. Set limits, stick to your budget, and never chase losses. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call 1-800-MY-RESET or visit ncpgambling.org. For more resources, see our Responsible Gambling page.

Frequently Asked Questions

Quick answers on how this ticket settles: the draw question, the day’s timeline, why the soccer legs use a handicap and a total, and how books price a parlay.

Does a draw in one of the World Cup matches sink this parlay?

Not automatically, which is what sets this ticket apart. The Morocco vs. Brazil leg is an Under 2.5 total, so it cashes on any result with two goals or fewer, including a draw. The Switzerland leg is a -1.5 handicap, so it needs the Swiss to win by two or more, and a draw or a one-goal win loses only that leg.

When will this 3-leg parlay be fully settled?

By around 8:00 p.m. ET on Saturday, June 13. Katie Boulter’s Queen’s Club semifinal starts at 9:30 a.m. ET, Switzerland vs. Qatar kicks off at 3:00 p.m. ET, and the Morocco vs. Brazil anchor begins at 6:00 p.m. ET. The ticket is alive until that last match finishes.

Why do the soccer legs use a handicap and a total instead of the moneyline?

Price and structure. Switzerland are around -475 to win outright, which is unplayable, so the -1.5 handicap is the bet. The Morocco vs. Brazil moneyline is a tight call, but the Under 2.5 total is the cleaner read on a low-event opener, and as a total it does not depend on which side wins.

Do I have to use one sportsbook to get the +408 price?

Yes, a parlay is always placed at a single book, so your combined number will differ from ours. We quoted each leg at the consensus price it was carded at, and the final odds depend on your book’s number for each leg when you place the bet. Shop the combined price the way you would a single line.

Paul Wilson
Paul Wilson

Paul Wilson is the Editor-in-Chief at GamblingSite.com, bringing more than 15 years of experience across sports betting and iGaming. He has spent his career focused on honest, hype-free coverage of the industry — favoring lines, value, and substance over the "lock of the century" marketing that crowds the space. A recreational bettor himself, Paul leads editorial coverage with an emphasis on transparency and practical insight, from expert site reviews to in-depth betting guides. His mission at GamblingSite.com is to help readers cut through the noise and understand where the industry is genuinely heading.