| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Novak Djokovic | 90% | 89¢ | 90¢ | — | $45K | Trade → |
| Aleksandar Kovacevic | 12% | 11¢ | 12¢ | — | $24K | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the Djokovic vs Kovacevic match. It matters because market prices aggregate publicly available information about form, conditions, and match dynamics that can change up to match time.
Novak Djokovic is one of the sport’s most accomplished players with extensive experience in high‑pressure matches and Grand Slam finals; Kovacevic is a touring professional who has competed at ATP/Challenger level and may be considered a less-established opponent. The matchup’s importance and likely dynamics depend on the tournament level, the playing surface, and both players’ recent schedules and fitness.
Market prices reflect traders’ collective read on who will win given current information — they move when new information (injuries, withdrawals, lineup announcements, weather) arrives. Use market pricing as one input alongside player statistics, head‑to‑head history, and live match updates.
The market resolves to the official winner of the Djokovic vs Kovacevic match as reported by the tournament or the designated official result feed; settlement follows the exchange’s published resolution rules.
The listed close time is currently TBD; typically these markets close shortly before the scheduled match start. Check the market page for the definitive close time and any schedule updates.
Monitor official starting lineups, injury or withdrawal notices, match schedule changes, weather or court conditions, and last‑minute news (e.g., travel delays). Live in‑match events will shift prices rapidly if the market remains open during play.
Settlement follows the tournament’s official result: a retirement during play is recorded as a win for the opposing player; walkovers or matches not played are resolved according to the exchange’s specific cancellation or settlement policy — consult the market rules if an official result is not produced.
Historical success indicates experience and proven ability in big matches, which is relevant, but short‑term factors (current form, fitness, surface matchup, and recent results) often have stronger predictive value for a single match outcome.