| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Federico Agustin Gomez | 21% | 0¢ | 98¢ | — | $26 | Trade → |
| Shintaro Mochizuki | 83% | 8¢ | 100¢ | — | $2 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the first set in the match Federico Agustin Gomez vs Shintaro Mochizuki. First-set outcomes matter because they reflect early match momentum and are commonly traded during pre-match and in-play windows.
Federico Agustin Gomez and Shintaro Mochizuki are professional tennis players with different career paths and match experience; past results, playing surface, and recent form shape expectations for a short segment like a single set. Set betting isolates early dynamics — short matches of a set favor players who start fast, serve well, or exploit immediate tactical edges.
Market odds represent the aggregated expectations of participants and will move as new information arrives (lineup confirmations, injuries, weather, live match progress). Use them as a dynamic indicator of how participants are updating beliefs about who will take Set 1, not as fixed predictions.
It resolves on the officially recorded winner of the first set of this match as reported by the tournament or official scoring source; a tiebreak winner counts as the set winner.
Close time is listed as TBD for this event; typically set-1 markets close shortly before the first ball of the set or at a platform-defined cutoff — check the platform for the final close time.
Live developments (early breaks, medical timeouts, weather delays, momentum swings) can move prices quickly because the market updates to reflect new information relevant to who will win the opening set.
Resolution follows the platform's rules: many markets require an official completed set to determine a winner. If Set 1 is not completed, consult the event rules on the trading platform for the specific settlement policy.
Key short-term stats include first-serve percentage, unforced errors in opening games, return points won, and break-point opportunities converted; serve dominance and immediate error rates often decide a single set.