| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| James Duckworth | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Marc-Andrea Huesler | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This prediction market is on the outcome of the head-to-head match between Duckworth and Huesler. It matters because match results determine tournament progression and provide a real-time aggregation of public sentiment about which player will win.
Both competitors are touring professional tennis players who regularly compete on the ATP/Challenger circuit; their performances can vary by surface, recent form, and tournament context. Markets like this are commonly offered around scheduled matches at tournaments and reflect evolving information such as lineup confirmations, injury reports, and pre-match conditions.
Market odds are a live summary of how participants are betting on which player will win; they update as new information arrives and trade volume changes. Treat odds as a market-implied consensus, not a guarantee of the match outcome.
Settlement is based on the officially declared winner of the Duckworth vs Huesler match as reported by the tournament/official results feed; the player recorded as winning the match is the winning outcome for the market.
The market close time is set by the platform (listed as TBD here); if the match time changes the market page or platform announcements will typically update—monitor the event page for the official close or any rescheduling notifications.
Watch official injury updates, withdrawal announcements, the tournament order of play, late practice reports, head-to-head notes, and any travel/fatigue information; pre-match odds shifts and in-play commentary can also reflect sudden developments.
Platforms typically follow the tournament's official ruling: a pre-match withdrawal or walkover may lead to market cancellation or a void/refund per platform rules, while an in-match retirement usually results in the player who advances being declared the match winner—check the specific market rules for final handling.
Yes — the round (e.g., early round versus later round), ranking points and prize incentives, and cumulative fatigue from prior rounds can all influence player motivation and performance, and are often reflected in market behavior.