| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Andrea Pellegrino | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Timofey Skatov | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market predicts which player—Andrea Pellegrino or Timofey Skatov—will win the first set of their match. First-set markets matter because they settle quickly and reflect early-match dynamics like serve performance and opening nerves.
This is a single-match market tied to a professional tennis match between Pellegrino and Skatov; markets like this are common across ATP/Challenger/ITF events and are resolved using the official match score. Player styles, recent form, and the match surface (hard, clay, or grass) typically shape expectations for a set-one outcome.
Odds in this market represent the market consensus about who is most likely to win the first set and will move as new information arrives (lineup confirmations, withdrawals, live match developments). Use odds as a snapshot of collective expectations, not a fixed prediction.
Close time is set by the market operator and typically occurs at or shortly before the scheduled match start; check the event page for the exact closing timestamp since it is listed as TBD until finalized.
Resolution follows the market's official rules and the tournament's official score. If the first set is incomplete at the time of retirement, consult the market rules and tournament scoreboard—some markets use the official first-set winner only if the set is completed; otherwise they may void or follow a specified rule.
Key match-level factors include which player serves first, each player’s warm-up and early-match aggressiveness, any recent travel or fatigue, and how their baseline vs. net game matches the surface for this particular meeting.
Look at recent meetings between them (if any), each player’s results in the last several matches on the same surface, and short-term trends like improving serve stats or sudden drops in performance; weigh recent, surface-specific form more heavily than distant results.
Official match results and live scores are posted on the tournament’s official site, recognized live scoring services, and the market event page—use those official sources to confirm the first-set score used for settlement.