| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Veronika Erjavec | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Tamara Zidansek | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the tennis match between Erjavec and Zidansek on the KALSHI platform. It matters to traders because match outcomes integrate real-time information about form, injuries, and playing conditions that can move prices quickly.
Erjavec vs Zidansek is a one-on-one professional tennis matchup; the two competitors bring different recent results, styles, and records against similar opponents. The match’s importance depends on the tournament stage and ranking points or prize money at stake, which can affect how both players approach tactics and risk during play. Past meetings and surface preferences provide context but do not deterministically predict the result.
Market prices reflect the collective assessment of who is more likely to win given available information and will change as new information arrives. Use prices as a real-time signal combined with independent evaluation of form, surface, and injuries rather than as definitive forecasts.
This market offers two mutually exclusive outcomes: Erjavec wins the match or Zidansek wins the match. The market settles on the official winner once the match result is confirmed by tournament officials.
The listed close time is TBD; typically markets close before the scheduled match start or when trading rules specify. Check the KALSHI platform for the final close time for this specific market.
Settlement follows official tournament results and the exchange’s rulebook: a completed match settles to the official winner, a retirement during play generally awards the win to the player who did not retire, and pre-match walkovers or cancellations may be voided or handled per platform policy—consult KALSHI’s settlement rules for definitive guidance.
Late-breaking factors that commonly move the market include confirmed withdrawals, injury reports from warmups, unexpected weather or court changes, changes to the scheduled start time, and official line-up confirmations indicating whether either player is fit to compete.
Consider head-to-head and surface history as informative but context-dependent: prioritize recent meetings, the surface on which those matches were played, and sample size. A single prior match or results on a different surface should carry less weight than consistent patterns across multiple recent matches on the same surface.