Daily Parlay Picks (6/10/2026): 2-Leg MLB Parlay at +250

Two-leg MLB daily parlay ticket graphic: Brewers vs Athletics and Dodgers vs Pirates, June 10, 2026

Today’s daily parlay stacks our two MLB picks for Wednesday, June 10 onto one ticket: the Brewers moneyline (-110) in Las Vegas and the Dodgers -1.5 run line (-120) in Pittsburgh, for combined odds of +250 at BetMGM. The legs’ own prices imply roughly a 26% chance the full ticket cashes, so treat this as one small-stakes swing at a 3.5x return, not two edges stacked into a sure thing.

Both legs stand on their own analysis, written up in full as standalone picks. The parlay is for bettors who like both positions and want one lottery-adjacent ticket instead of two separate plays. Here is the ticket, the reasoning behind each leg, and the honest math on what +250 actually means.

Daily Parlay
2-Leg MLB Parlay
Combined Odds: +250
Wednesday, June 10, 2026
$100 returns $250.00 in profit if every leg hits

The Ticket

Two legs, both from tonight’s MLB card: a coin-flip price on the better team in Vegas, and a run line that buys the day’s most lopsided pitching matchup at near even money.

Daily Parlay · 2 Legs MLB · June 10
Brewers Moneyline
Milwaukee Brewers at Athletics · 9:05 PM ET
-110
Dodgers -1.5 Run Line
Los Angeles Dodgers at Pittsburgh Pirates · 6:40 PM ET
-120
Combined Odds
+250
Decimal
3.50
$100 Returns
$250.00
The legs’ own prices imply roughly a 26% chance the full ticket cashes (vig removed per leg, multiplied across independent games, per BetMGM). One ticket, not 2 separate edges.
Odds via BetMGM · Subject to change

Breaking Down the Legs

Each leg has a full standalone writeup; here is the short version of why both made the ticket.

Leg 1: Brewers Moneyline (-110)

Milwaukee is 41-24 and leads the NL Central; the Athletics are 32-35. The market has the Las Vegas series finale priced as a coin flip anyway, because both starters carry 6-plus ERAs and Monday’s game here produced a historic 29 runs. That chaos is real, which is why this leg is the moneyline and not the run line, but a first-place club with an offense averaging better than eight runs a game in June against a 6.19 ERA starter is the side we want at even money. The full case is in our Brewers vs. Athletics pick.

Leg 2: Dodgers -1.5 Run Line (-120)

Shohei Ohtani takes the mound with a 0.74 ERA and one earned run allowed over his last 24 innings, against Jared Jones making just his third start back from elbow surgery on a managed pitch count. The Dodgers lead the NL in batting average, won the opener 12-3, and have been winning by margin, which is what a -1.5 ticket needs. Laying -200 on the moneyline is the expensive version of the same opinion; the run line at -120 is the one we took. The full case is in our Dodgers vs. Pirates pick.

Parlay Math, Honestly

A parlay multiplies prices, not edges. The -110 and -120 legs convert to decimal odds of about 1.91 and 1.83; multiply them and you get 3.50, which is +250 in American odds. Strip the bookmaker’s margin out of each leg and the market’s own numbers say this ticket cashes roughly 26% of the time. That is the whole deal in one sentence: you are accepting a three-in-four chance of losing the stake in exchange for a 2.5x profit when both legs land.

Books promote parlays because the house edge compounds: every leg carries its own slice of vig, and stacking legs stacks those slices. That does not make a two-leg ticket irrational, it makes it a deliberate variance trade, and two legs is where the trade stays reasonable. Our parlay betting guide walks through when stacking makes sense and when it quietly bleeds you. You can sanity-check any combination yourself with our parlay calculator.

Size it accordingly: whatever your normal single-bet stake is, a parlay deserves a fraction of it. If you would put $50 on the Brewers alone, this ticket is a $10-to-$20 piece of entertainment with an analytical backbone, not a $50 position. Check first pitch times on the MLB scoreboard before you lock anything in, because lines and lineups move late.

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

Quick answers on how this ticket works: what happens if a game gets postponed, whether singles are the smarter play, and how we grade parlays.

What happens to my parlay if one of these games gets postponed?

At most sportsbooks, a postponed or canceled leg is removed from the ticket and the parlay recalculates using the remaining legs at their original prices. This two-leg ticket would simply become a straight bet on the surviving leg at its single-game odds. Check your book’s house rules, because settlement details vary.

Should I bet these two picks as singles or as a parlay?

Singles are the steadier play, and both legs are published as full standalone picks for exactly that reason. The parlay only makes sense if you want one small-stakes ticket with a bigger payout and you accept that the market-implied chance of cashing is roughly 26%. It is a variance choice, not a value upgrade.

Why is the parlay payout so much bigger than either single bet?

Because the prices multiply: -110 and -120 convert to about 1.91 and 1.83 in decimal odds, and 1.91 x 1.83 is roughly 3.50, or +250. The payout grows because the probability of winning shrinks; both legs have to hit. The bookmaker’s margin also compounds across legs, which is why books push parlays so hard.

How do you grade and track your parlay picks?

Every published ticket is graded after its last leg finishes and recorded in our picks ledger alongside our straight picks, win or lose. A parlay counts as one bet at the combined odds, so a 2-leg winner at +250 books as one win at that price, not two separate wins.

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.