| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alejandro Tabilo | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Francisco Comesana | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the first set in the match between Alejandro Tabilo and Francisco Comesana. It matters because the first set often sets momentum for the match and is a common focus for short-term traders and in-play strategies.
Alejandro Tabilo is a Chilean tour-level player known for an aggressive game and a strong serve; Francisco Comesana is an Argentine player who has had notable results, particularly on slower surfaces. The matchup can hinge on surface and conditions: one player’s power can be favored on faster courts while the other’s consistency and clay-court experience can matter on slower venues.
Market odds aggregate many traders’ views and new information in real time; they are not guarantees but indicate how the market currently prices the likelihood of each player taking the first set. Odds can move quickly with match-day news such as court surface confirmation, injuries, or line-up changes.
The listed close time is TBD; typically such markets close at or just before the match start or when the first set begins, but exact closure depends on the platform’s rules and any pre-match changes announced by tournament officials.
Each outcome corresponds to which player wins the first set of the match—either Alejandro Tabilo wins set 1 or Francisco Comesana wins set 1. A tiebreak outcome still counts as whichever player wins that first set.
Surface and location affect point construction and serve effectiveness: faster courts tend to favor big servers and aggressive players early in sets, while slower courts reward consistent baseline play and longer rallies, altering first-set dynamics.
Head-to-head results can be informative but are best used with context—consider the surface, date of previous encounters, and whether players’ forms have changed since those matches; small-sample H2H records can be misleading without that context.
In-match developments can move the market sharply: an injury or medical timeout that hampers a player’s mobility, a sudden weather change affecting ball speed, or a delay disrupting rhythm can all materially change the probability of winning the first set and should be monitored closely.