| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shintaro Mochizuki | 0% | 1¢ | 99¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Benjamin Bonzi | 0% | 1¢ | 99¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market resolves on who wins the first set between Benjamin Bonzi and Shintaro Mochizuki. First-set outcomes matter because they often set match momentum and are widely used by traders and in-play bettors to make short-term decisions.
Benjamin Bonzi is an established tour-level player known for competing regularly on the ATP circuit; Shintaro Mochizuki is a younger, rising player with a strong junior pedigree and growing experience at the professional level. Surface, tournament stage, and recent match play can shift the expected dynamics between an experienced tour player and an up-and-coming opponent.
Market prices reflect the aggregated expectations of traders and respond to new information such as confirmed lineups, withdrawals, injury reports, and live match events. Use price movement as a real-time signal of how new information is being incorporated rather than a fixed prediction.
The market's close time is listed as TBD and will be set by the platform; typically such markets close at or just before the match start or when the organizer specifies. Check the market page for the definitive close time.
There are two mutually exclusive outcomes: Benjamin Bonzi wins set 1, or Shintaro Mochizuki wins set 1. If the set is not completed or the match is abandoned, the platform's resolution rules determine how the market is settled.
Settlement follows the tournament's official scoring: the player who wins the first set according to the match referee/official scorecard. Most professional events use first to six games with a two-game margin and commonly a tiebreak at 6–6, but check the tournament rules for exceptions.
Confirm the playing surface, starting order, any late withdrawals, official warm-up reports, injury or medical timeouts in pre-match practice, and recent results for each player on the same surface and conditions.
Consult official sources such as ATP/ITF head-to-head pages, the tournament's official site for match records, and live scoring services for recent form. If there is no prior head-to-head, give extra weight to surface-specific results and recent tour-level performances.