| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alexandra Eala | 19% | 18¢ | 19¢ | — | $10K | Trade → |
| Coco Gauff | 82% | 81¢ | 82¢ | — | $3K | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the tennis match between Coco Gauff and Alex Eala; it matters because it aggregates market sentiment about the likely match winner and reflects how bettors price form, matchup, and conditions.
Coco Gauff is an established WTA player noted for athleticism, power and experience at high-level events. Alex Eala is an emerging professional from the Philippines with strong junior credentials and growing tour results, making this a matchup between a proven tour leader and a rising talent.
Market odds are a real-time summary of traders' views and new information; they indicate collective expectations but are not guarantees. Odds typically move as lineups, injuries, recent results, and other news arrive, so check the market page for the latest pricing and liquidity.
Close and resolution times are set by the platform and may be tied to the official tournament schedule; check the market page for the precise close time and the platform's settlement rules for how and when the outcome will be finalized.
This market offers two mutually exclusive outcomes corresponding to the match winner: one outcome for a Gauff victory and one for an Eala victory; settlement follows the official match result as recognized by the tournament and platform rules.
If prior head-to-head meetings exist, consider those results, match scorelines, and conditions, but also factor in recency, form changes, and whether those matches were on similar surfaces or at comparable tournament levels.
Surface and conditions influence serve and rally dynamics—faster surfaces can reward big serves and aggressive play, while slower surfaces favor defense and point construction—so align each player's strengths with the expected conditions for this match.
Such situations are resolved according to the platform's published rules and the tournament's official decisions; typically retirements and walkovers are settled based on match-play rules, and postponed or unplayed matches follow the market's specified contingency policy—consult the market terms for details.