| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arthur Rinderknech | 5% | 4¢ | 5¢ | — | $25K | Trade → |
| Carlos Alcaraz | 97% | 96¢ | 97¢ | — | $19K | Trade → |
This market lets traders take positions on the match outcome between Carlos Alcaraz and Arthur Rinderknech, aggregating public and expert expectations about who will win. It matters because markets synthesize diverse information—form, conditions, and news—into a single, tradable signal.
Carlos Alcaraz is widely regarded as a top-level player known for exceptional court movement, heavy groundstrokes, and experience at the sport's biggest events; Arthur Rinderknech is a powerful, big-serving French player whose aggressive game can pressure opponents, particularly on faster surfaces. Their meeting is a classic contrast of elite baseline defence and speed versus raw power and serving strength, making tactical matchup and surface particularly relevant.
Market prices reflect the collective beliefs of traders and update as new information (injuries, weather, lineup changes, live scoring) arrives. Interpret them as a dynamic indicator of market sentiment rather than a definitive forecast.
This market has two outcomes corresponding to which player wins the match: Carlos Alcaraz or Arthur Rinderknech; check the market page for exact labels used by the platform.
The market close is set by the platform and typically aligns with the official scheduled start; if the match is postponed or rescheduled the platform will update the market close—monitor the event page for official announcements.
Settlement follows the market's official rules: commonly, a withdrawal before the match may void the market or trigger a refund, while a retirement after the match starts usually results in the remaining player being settled as the winner; consult the platform's terms for precise handling.
Key movers include injury or fitness updates, confirmed warmup reports, official withdrawals, changes to court conditions, and bookmaker odds or expert commentary released close to match time.
Head‑to‑head history provides useful tactical context, but it should be balanced against current form, surface, recent match load, and any new developments—markets reflect all these inputs together.