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The Following Leaderboard ranks every bettor you follow on Pikkit by their current ROI, with each one's win-loss record next to it. The people actually making money rise to the top and the ones quietly losing sink to the bottom. It's personalized to your follow list. Nobody else's leaderboard looks like yours.
You'll find it in your own Following tab, under the Performance view, with a version of it on Pikkit's Discover page too. It answers a question most bettors never get a clean answer to: of all the people I'm tailing, who's actually worth tailing?
This guide covers what the leaderboard shows, how the ROI math and the ranking windows work, why a personalized leaderboard is more useful than a global one, how favoriting pins your key follows to the top, and how to use all of it to decide who to keep following and who to cut.
Each row on the leaderboard is one bettor you follow, and it shows two numbers that matter.
ROI: the percentage return on every dollar they've put at risk over a recent window. A bettor at +9% ROI has made 9 cents of profit for every dollar staked. A bettor at -4% has lost 4 cents on the dollar.
Win-loss record: how many bets they've won versus lost in that same window, written like 38-29.
Both sections order by ROI, highest first. The bettors returning the most on their action rise to the top and the people who are flat or losing settle toward the bottom. That ordering is the whole point. It puts your most productive follows in front of you and makes the dead weight obvious.
Every record on the leaderboard is pulled straight from synced sportsbook data through BookSync, not self-reported. A bettor can't type in a fake ROI or quietly hide their losing weeks. What you see is what their books actually settled.
The leaderboard lives in your Following tab, under the Performance view, and it comes in two parts.
The top section is the Following Leaderboard itself: your top 5 follows ranked by their last 7 days of ROI. The top three sit on a podium, with fourth and fifth listed just below. It's a quick read on who among your follows has been hottest over the past week.

Below it is the Yesterday section: your complete follow list, ranked by each bettor's ROI from the day before, with their profit in units and record alongside. This is the full, scrollable view, and it's where you can favorite bettors. Tap the star on anyone and they move to the top of the list, so the follows you care about most stay visible no matter how they ranked yesterday. It's a bit of customization that keeps your key people front and center while you scan who has done well recently.

The same leaderboard also appears in a section of Pikkit's Discover page, so you can reach it from either place.

It's tempting to rank the people you follow by win rate. Resist it. Win rate and profit are not the same thing. The leaderboard sorts by ROI for a reason.
Say you follow two bettors over the same 70 bets:
Bettor B wins more often and still loses money, because winning 63% of the time at -250 doesn't clear the break-even bar (that price needs about 71% to profit). Bettor A wins less often, but each win pays more than each loss costs. On a win-rate leaderboard, B looks like the better follow. On an ROI leaderboard, A is the one actually padding your bankroll.
That's why the Following Leaderboard leads with ROI. Record is useful context, but ROI is the number that tells you whether following someone has been a good decision.
Most betting leaderboards you'll see online are global. They rank every "expert" or every user on a platform, and the names at the top are strangers betting sports and stakes that may have nothing to do with how you bet.
The Following Leaderboard is the opposite. It only ranks people you chose to follow. That makes it immediately actionable in a way a global list isn't.
It's a verdict on your own judgment. You followed these people for a reason, so a ranking of them tells you how good those reasons turned out to be. If your follows cluster near the top with positive ROI, your instincts are sound. If most of them are underwater, your follow list needs work. And it's small enough to act on: a global leaderboard of 10,000 users is trivia, while a ranked list of the 12 people you follow is a to-do list.
If you're still building out who to follow, our guide on how to find profitable bettors to follow and the Consistent Winners section on Discover are the places to start. Once they're on your follow list, the leaderboard tracks them for you.
The leaderboard isn't just a scoreboard. It's a tool for pruning and protecting your follow list. A few practical ways to read it:
Best for: spotting who to cut. A bettor sitting at the bottom with a negative ROI over a meaningful number of bets is costing you, especially if you've been copying them. The leaderboard makes that obvious instead of letting a cold streak hide in your feed.
Best for: doubling down on what works. If the same two or three names keep holding the top spots week after week, those are the follows worth the most attention, and the ones worth copying when they post a play.
Best for: keeping your core follows in view. In the Yesterday list, favorite the bettors you rely on so they pin to the top. The follows you actually act on stay one glance away, even on a day their ROI would otherwise bury them.
Watch for: small samples. A bettor at +40% ROI over 11 bets hasn't proven anything yet. Eleven bets is noise. Give the number time before you treat a hot start as a real edge, and extend the same patience to a brief cold stretch from a proven follow.
Watch for: style mismatch. A follow can be profitable for them and still wrong for you. If someone tops your leaderboard betting niche markets you'd never touch, their ROI doesn't transfer to your account. Follow people whose approach you can actually use.
The leaderboard earns its keep when you're copying bets from more than one person. Copy three or four bettors and your results blur together. You see your overall profit, but not which follow is driving it.
The Following Leaderboard separates them. You might see at a glance that the bettor you've been copying most is sitting at -5% while a follow you've been ignoring is at +14%. That's a signal to shift where your copy money goes.
Pair it with your own bet tracking for the full picture. The leaderboard tells you how the people you follow are doing. Your own tracker tells you how you're doing on the bets you actually copied, which can differ if you got worse odds or sized your stakes differently. Read together, they tell you whether your copy strategy is genuinely working.
A few honest limits worth keeping in mind so you read it correctly.
ROI is a results metric, not a process metric. A high ROI over a short window can come from running hot rather than from skill. For a sharper read on whether a bettor's edge is real, closing line value is the better signal. A bettor who consistently beats the closing line is doing something right regardless of a rough week, and a bettor who never beats it is probably riding variance no matter how green their ROI looks today.
It ranks, it doesn't predict. Topping the leaderboard this month doesn't guarantee next month. Past ROI is information, not a promise.
The window is short. The top section runs on the last 7 days and the Yesterday section on a single day, so rankings move quickly as new bets settle. Someone can top your board one week and slide the next. Check it regularly rather than treating any one snapshot as permanent.
There's no setup beyond using the app the way it's designed.
That's it. Once it's populated, it maintains itself.
The Following Leaderboard turns a vague feeling ("I think a couple of the people I follow are good") into a ranked, ROI-sorted, BookSync-verified answer. It rewards the follows making you money, exposes the ones that aren't, and gives you a clean way to manage your list instead of letting losing tails ride out of habit.
Follow the right people, let the leaderboard rank them, and act on what it shows you.
Download Pikkit to follow bettors and see your Following Leaderboard in the Following tab.
It's a leaderboard in your Following tab, under the Performance view. It has two parts: a top 5 of your follows ranked by their last 7 days of ROI, and a complete list of everyone you follow ranked by the prior day's ROI, with each bettor's win-loss record shown alongside. It's personalized to your follow list, and a version of it also appears on Pikkit's Discover page.
ROI is net profit divided by total amount staked over a recent window, shown as a percentage. A bettor who staked 100 units and finished up 9 units sits at +9% ROI. The figure is based on settled bets synced through BookSync, not self-reported results, so it reflects real outcomes.
Because win rate alone doesn't tell you whether someone is profitable. A bettor can win most of their bets on heavy favorites and still lose money, while a bettor with a lower win rate on plus-money underdogs can be clearly profitable. ROI captures both how often someone wins and how much each win pays, which is why it's the more honest ranking.
There's no hard cutoff, but a few dozen settled bets is the rough point where the number starts to carry signal. Anything in the single digits or low teens is mostly noise. Treat a small-sample ROI, high or low, with caution until more bets settle.
No. Consistent Winners surfaces bettors across all of Pikkit with sustained positive ROI, which is useful for finding new people to follow. The Following Leaderboard only ranks people you already follow. One helps you discover bettors, the other helps you manage the ones you've picked.
Yes, and that's one of its best uses. If you copy bets from several people, the leaderboard shows which of them is actually producing, so you can lean into the follows that are working and rethink the ones that aren't. Pair it with your own bet tracker to confirm your copied results match the leaderboard.
Yes. Every ROI and record is built from sportsbook data synced through BookSync, so bettors can't inflate their numbers or hide losing stretches. The ranking reflects what their books actually settled.
Open the Following tab and tap Performance. The top 5 by last 7 days of ROI sits at the top, and your full follow list ranked by yesterday's ROI is below it. The same leaderboard also appears in a section of the Discover page.
Yes. In the Yesterday list, favorite a bettor by tapping the star on their row, and they move to the top regardless of how they ranked that day. It keeps the follows you care about most in view.
The top section ranks by the last 7 days of ROI and the Yesterday section by the prior day, and both move as new bets settle. A bettor can climb or drop several positions in a week, which is why it's worth checking regularly rather than relying on a single snapshot.
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