| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alexander Blockx | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Chun Hsin Tseng | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player—Alexander Blockx or Chun Hsin Tseng—will win the first set of their match. It matters for short-term traders and fans who want to reflect expected opening-set dynamics rather than the final match outcome.
Both players are young professionals on the international tour with differing experience profiles and recent match histories; their relative strengths can vary by surface and tournament level. Surface, weather, and scheduling (rest between matches) are common contextual drivers that change how each player's skills translate to a single-set contest.
Market prices aggregate the community’s views on who is most likely to take the first set and will move as new information arrives (lineups, warmups, injury news, in-play events). Treat prices as a snapshot of consensus expectation, not a fixed forecast.
Settlement follows the platform’s market rules; many exchanges treat a retirement during set 1 as a match retirement and settle in favor of the opponent, but you should check the specific exchange rules for retirements and incomplete sets for this event.
Yes — the set 1 winner is determined by whatever completes the set, including a tiebreak; the market settles on whoever wins the first set, whether by tiebreak or by a standard 6-x scoreline.
The close time for this specific market is set by the exchange and currently marked as TBD; check the event page on the platform for the official close time and whether in-play trading is permitted once the match begins.
Direct head-to-head matches are the most relevant historical signal for this matchup; if they have met, use those first-set patterns and conditions. If they haven’t, prioritize recent form on the same surface, opponent quality, and match conditions as proxies.
Watch warm-up footage, medical timeouts or physio reports, official practice and withdrawal notices, court/weather conditions, and any pre-match comments about fitness or strategy — these factors commonly move expectations for the opening set.