MLB.com verifies a full Friday card for May 7, and the easiest way to read it is through timing rather than volume. Texas at New York opens the evening's most visible window, while the late block on the West Coast keeps the board live long after the first pitch in the East.
Why the split matters
Games at different times do not move for the same reasons. Early lines react to lineup and pitcher confirmation, while later games can still shift on bullpen usage, weather and late batting-order changes. That means the market is effectively giving bettors two separate decision points instead of one long card.
Practical betting read
The Texas-New York matchup is the cleanest reference point because it sits in the premier night slot and usually carries the most attention from traders and bettors. The late West Coast games matter less for branding and more for the way they can still reprice totals or sides once lineups are final.
Bottom line
Friday is not a day to chase every game. It is a day to isolate the first verified window, wait for the last useful information, and play only when the number still makes sense.