Daily Parlay Picks (6/14/2026): 3-Leg MLB, Tennis & Stanley Cup Parlay at +556

Three-leg daily sports betting parlay ticket graphic for June 14, 2026

Today’s daily parlay stacks three of our Standard Plays into one 3-leg ticket priced at +556: Emma Raducanu on the moneyline in the Queen’s final, the Atlanta Braves at plus money, and the Over in Stanley Cup Final Game 6. A $100 ticket returns about $556 in profit if all three land, but the legs’ own prices imply only around a 13% chance that happens, so treat this as one small swing for the fences, not three separate edges.

We like all three of these bets on their own, which is the only honest reason to put them on a card together. The parlay does not make any single leg more likely to win; it just multiplies three near-coin-flips into a number big enough to be fun for a small stake. Bet it that way, and lean on the singles if you want the higher-percentage plays.

Daily Parlay
3-Leg MLB, Tennis & NHL Parlay
Combined Odds: +556
Sunday, June 14, 2026
$100 returns $556 in profit if every leg hits
LOSS
Parlay loses – all three legs went down: Vekic beat Raducanu, the Mets routed the Braves 8-1, and Game 6 stayed Under 6 in Carolina’s 3-0 clincher.

The Ticket

Here is the full three-leg ticket, the combined price, and what a $100 stake pays if it runs the table.

Daily Parlay · 3 Legs MLB, Tennis & NHL · Jun 14
Raducanu Moneyline
Emma Raducanu vs. Donna Vekic · 8:30 AM ET
-147
Braves Moneyline
Atlanta Braves at New York Mets · 1:41 PM ET
+100
Over 6 Goals
Hurricanes at Golden Knights, Cup Final Game 6 · 8:00 PM ET
-105
Combined Odds
+556
Decimal
6.56
$100 Returns
$556
The legs’ own prices imply roughly a 13% chance the full ticket cashes (vig removed per leg, multiplied across three independent games, per FanDuel). One ticket, not three separate edges.
Odds via FanDuel · Subject to change

Breaking Down the Legs

Each leg is a Standard Play we are backing on its own merits. The parlay just ties them together for a bigger number and a longer shot.

Leg 1: Raducanu Moneyline

Emma Raducanu reached the Queen’s final by going 4-0 on grass this week without dropping a set, beating two seeded players along the way, and she gets the in-form edge as the home favorite at around -147. Donna Vekic is a dangerous underdog with a real grass pedigree (a 2024 Wimbledon semifinalist and Olympic silver medalist), which is exactly why this is a Standard Play rather than a lock, but the market still sits Raducanu near 57% and she has not looked like dropping a set all week. The full case is in our Raducanu vs. Vekic prediction.

Leg 2: Braves Moneyline

This is a value play on plus money: the Atlanta Braves are a coin-flip dog at +100 against the Mets despite being the stronger team on paper. When a quality club is priced at even money or better, you are getting season-long pedigree for free, and we prefer the moneyline to the run line here because a modest total suggests runs could be at a premium. The Braves still have to win the game outright, which keeps it a Standard Play. The full case is in our Braves vs. Mets prediction.

Leg 3: Over 6 Goals

The Stanley Cup Final has been a track meet: 39 goals across five games (7.8 a night), every game over six, and Vegas allowing at least four in all five. Game 6 is an elimination game in Las Vegas with the total sitting at six, which looks low for this matchup, so we are on the Over at around -105. Overtime-inflated totals and the chance an elimination game tightens up are the honest risks. The full case is in our Hurricanes vs. Golden Knights Game 6 prediction, and you can follow the series on the official NHL playoff hub.

Parlay Math, Honestly

The +556 price is not generosity, it is multiplication. You convert each leg to decimal odds (Raducanu 1.68, the Braves 2.00, the Over 1.95) and multiply them together: 1.68 times 2.00 times 1.95 lands at about 6.56, which is +556 in American terms. Three near-coin-flips stacked on one ticket is how you get a payout that looks big.

The catch is that the same multiplication works against you. Strip the vig out of each leg and the three implied probabilities multiply to roughly 13%, so the market is telling you this ticket fails about seven times out of eight. Books love parlays precisely because the house edge on each leg compounds. You can sanity-check any combination yourself with our parlay calculator.

So size it like the lottery ticket it is. A parlay should take a fraction of what you would put on a single play, because you are trading a much lower hit rate for a bigger number. If you want the higher-percentage action, the three singles are the better bet; the parlay is the fun, small-stakes version. Never chase a missed ticket by doubling up the next one.

We grade every ticket we publish, win or lose, in its own parlay ledger. See our verified track record →

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Frequently Asked Questions

Here are the questions bettors are asking most about today’s daily parlay.

What is in today’s daily parlay and what does it pay?

It is a 3-leg ticket at +556 combining Raducanu on the moneyline (-147), the Braves on the moneyline (+100), and the Over 6 in Stanley Cup Final Game 6 (-105). A $100 stake returns about $556 in profit if all three legs win. Odds are subject to change before the games start.

How likely is this parlay to actually hit?

Not very, and that is the honest math. Stripping the vig out of each leg and multiplying the three probabilities together puts the chance all three land at roughly 13%, so the ticket is expected to lose far more often than it wins. That is the trade-off for the bigger payout, which is why it should be a small-stakes bet.

What happens to my parlay if one of the games is postponed or a leg pushes?

If a leg is postponed or graded no-action, that leg drops out and the parlay re-prices on the remaining legs at their combined odds. If a leg pushes (a tie against the number), the same thing happens: that leg comes out and the ticket pays on the rest. A parlay only loses outright when one of its legs actually loses.

Should I bet the parlay or just the individual picks?

If you want the higher-percentage play, bet the singles. Each leg is a Standard Play we like on its own, and singles win far more often than a three-leg stack. The parlay is the fun, small-stakes version that trades a lower hit rate for a much bigger number. Bet it accordingly and never chase a miss.

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.