Both markets sit under NHL player props, but they reward very different kinds of thinking. An anytime goal scorer bet is about a single finishing event. Shot props are about repeatable volume, what a skater does shift after shift on the ice.

So which one actually puts more money in your pocket long-term? It depends on two things: what you can estimate with more confidence, and how much variance (and emotional volatility) your bankroll can absorb.

NHL Player Prop Betting

NHL prop bets are wagers on specific outcomes within a game, not the final score. NHL player prop bets focus on one player’s stats or events.

Common NHL player props include:

Most books start with a projection (built from stats, usage, and matchup), then adjust based on their own risk and market action. That’s why two sportsbooks can show the same line, but different odds.

The main edge in NHL player props is usually role-reading:

And because you’re betting on one player and one stat, managing exposure and correlation matters. If several bets depend on the same game script, you’re not diversified, you’re concentrated.

What Is an Anytime Goal Scorer Bet?

An anytime goal scorer bet is the classic “player to score a goal” market in hockey. You’re backing one skater to score at least once during the game.

Bet Mechanics

In most sportsbooks, “anytime” means:

When It Pays Out

An anytime goal scorer ticket cashes if your skater scores a goal in the first, second, or third period, or in overtime (if the sportsbook counts overtime for that market). The only thing that matters is the official scoring credit.

And yes, if you’re browsing anytime NHL goal scorer markets today, you’re basically shopping a board of prices. The smart filter is role + opportunity + matchup, not “who’s due.”

Pros and Cons of Anytime Goal Scorer Bets

Before you click anytime goal scorer, treat it like a “one-event” bet: you’re paying for upside, and you’re accepting that variance can bully you even when the read is good.

Pros:

Cons:

What Are Shot Prop Bets?

Shot props are NHL player props built around volume. Instead of needing a goal to happen, you’re betting that a skater will generate enough shots (or attempts, depending on the market) over the game, which usually makes the result feel more connected to role, ice time, and matchup than pure scoring.

Types of Shot Props

Books don’t always label these the same way, so the key is understanding what counts:

Some books also offer player “shots” in alternate formats (2+, 3+, 4+ shots), but the core logic is the same.

How Shot Props Work

Most shot props are posted as an over/under line. The number is the sportsbook’s estimate of that player’s shot volume in that specific game environment.

What drives the outcome is usually:

A real example you’ll see often: Auston Matthews over 4.5 shots on goal. He’s a Toronto Maple Leafs star, plays heavy minutes, and his role creates consistent volume, but the matchup can still swing the outcome.

Pros and Cons of Shot Prop Betting

Pros:

Cons

Key Differences Between Anytime Goal Scorer and Shot Prop Betting

This is the clean split: goal scorer markets are about finishing; shot props are about usage on the ice and how a skater is being played on the rink.

CategoryAnytime goal scorerShot props
What you needA goal eventVolume (shots/attempts)
VarianceHighLower (still real)
What drives itFinishing + opportunityIce time + usage + matchup
Best fitWhen odds lag role changeWhen volume is stable

The short version: goal scorer bets are “did the moment happen”; shots are “did the role produce.”

Profitability Analysis

“More profitable” isn’t about which bet type sounds smarter. It’s about whether you beat the price.

That said, these markets usually behave differently in two practical ways:

Typical Odds Ranges Look Different

Anytime goal scorer prices often sit in plus-money territory on daily boards, while shot props are frequently priced like standard two-way props. For example, a typical anytime goal scorer board shows a spread of plus prices across skaters (the exact numbers vary by slate).Meanwhile, shot prop examples are commonly posted around standard prop pricing ranges (again, varies by matchup).

The Built-in Margin Can Hit You Differently

Two-way prop pricing often works like this: if both sides are priced around -110, the implied probabilities add up to about 104.76%, which reflects the bookmaker’s margin (vig/overround).

Goal scorer markets can be trickier because some books offer them as one-way “Yes” prices, or they price “Yes/No” with different shading. In practice, it can be easier to feel like you’re getting a big payout, while still paying a meaningful margin in the long run.

Historical Performance and Trends

What actually changes through a season:

So yes, NHL betting trends matter, but not as “the book gets sharper.” The edge tends to come from role and context changing faster than the line moves.

Factors That Impact Profitability

For goal scorer markets:

For shot props:

If you’re trying to be systematic, think in inputs and weights; you’re building a repeatable decision model, not chasing highlights.

Strategies for Betting NHL Player Props

There’s no magic algorithm here; the win is matching your bet type to what you can estimate with the least guesswork, then protecting your bankroll from variance.

When to Choose Goal Scorer vs. Shot Props

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FAQ

  • What is the difference between an anytime goal scorer and a shot prop bet?

    An anytime goal scorer bet needs one goal from your player. A shot prop bet needs volume; over/under a shots line.

  • Which type of NHL prop bet is generally more profitable?

    Neither is automatically “more profitable.” Profitability comes from beating the odds. That said, shot props are often the better default for disciplined bettors because the inputs (ice time, role, matchup) tend to be more predictable, and you get more signal in a smaller sample. Goal scorer bets can be very profitable in targeted spots when a player’s scoring role is mispriced, but the higher variance means you need a bigger sample to judge whether your edge is real.

  • How do odds compare between goal scorer bets and shot props?

    Goal scorer odds are usually longer because the event is rarer. Shot props tend to be tighter pricing because volume is more predictable.

  • Can I combine these bets in a parlay?

    Yes, but watch correlation and bankroll exposure. If you’re building an NHL parlay today, keep it small and avoid stacking multiple legs that all depend on the same single game script.