| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jack Draper | 57% | 58¢ | 67¢ | — | $1 | Trade → |
| Francisco Cerundolo | 0% | 33¢ | 46¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player — Francisco Cerundolo or Jack Draper — will win the first set of their upcoming match. The first set often sets momentum for the rest of the match and is a common focus for in-play strategies and short-term markets.
Cerundolo and Draper have contrasting styles: Cerundolo is typically a grinding baseline player who excels in longer rallies, while Draper uses a big serve and aggressive hitting to shorten points. The likely importance of those traits depends on the tournament surface, match conditions, recent form, and whether either player carries injury or fatigue into the match.
Market odds reflect traders’ collective expectations and update as new information (injury news, lineup confirmations, weather, etc.) arrives. Because volume and trading activity affect stability, treat odds as a live signal that can change rapidly around match start and breaking news.
The market close time is listed as TBD; on many platforms markets close at or just before match start or when the platform determines the event is underway. Check the event page for any updated close time before the match.
The player who wins the tiebreak wins the first set; the market resolves based on the official match score as recorded by the tournament or the platform's designated official source.
Resolution follows the official match report. If the tournament records a completed first set, that result stands. If the match is a walkover or the first set is incomplete, the platform will resolve the market according to its official rules using the tournament's official outcome.
Focus on set-level and surface-specific patterns: some players start slowly but win later sets, others win early by leveraging serve or aggression. Compare recent matches on the same surface and look for tendencies in first-set performance rather than only final-match outcomes.
Low traded volume indicates limited liquidity and few participants; quoted odds may be unstable and can move substantially with small trades or new information. Use low-volume markets with caution and monitor for updates as match time approaches.