| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alex Bolt | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Alex Rybakov | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This prediction market asks which player—Alex Bolt or Alex Rybakov—will win the first set of their match. It matters for traders who want to express a view on short-term, in-match outcomes rather than the overall match winner.
Alex Bolt and Alex Rybakov are competing in a singles match where early-set dynamics, serve strength, and fast starts often determine the first-set winner. Historical form, recent match play, and surface preference provide useful context for anticipating who takes the opening set.
Market odds reflect the collective assessment of traders based on available information and will move as new data arrives (lineups, conditions, in-play stats). Use prices to gauge the market’s consensus about who is favored to win the opening set, and expect them to change up to and during the match.
Settlement is based on the official result of the first completed set: the market is resolved once the first set finishes and an official winner for that set is recorded.
If the first set is not completed due to a retirement, suspension, or abandonment, resolution follows the platform’s rules—commonly the market may be voided; if the set was completed before the retirement, the completed-set winner is used for settlement.
Key live stats include first-serve percentage, service holds vs. breaks, break-point chances and conversions, unforced errors in early games, and how each player performs on return in opening games.
Historical first-set records and patterns (e.g., a player who regularly wins opening sets or tends to start slowly) are informative but should be combined with current form, opponent matchup, and surface-specific data for this match.
Delays can change trading activity and odds as new information emerges; platforms may suspend trading until the match is ready to play or keep the market open with prices adjusting, but settlement still depends on the official first-set result once play occurs.