| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| George Loffhagen | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Jurij Rodionov | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the first set in the tennis match between George Loffhagen and Jurij Rodionov. Set-level markets are useful for traders who want exposure to short, discrete portions of a match rather than the full-match outcome.
George Loffhagen and Jurij Rodionov are professional players who typically compete on the ATP Challenger and ATP Tour circuits; individual form, surface preference, and recent results matter more in a single-set market than cumulative career achievements. Because this is a Set 1 market, early-match factors (serve performance, fast starts, mental focus) can have outsized impact compared with a whole-match market. The market source is KALSHI and the listed close time is currently TBD, so monitor the market page for updates tied to the official match schedule.
Prediction market prices reflect traders' collective view of which player is more likely to win the first set at the time of trading; treat prices as a snapshot that will change as pre-match and in-play information arrives. For settlement, outcomes are determined by the official match scoreboard published by the tournament or governing body.
The market page currently lists the close time as TBD; typically a Set 1 market closes at or shortly before the scheduled start of the match or the first ball of the set, but you should watch the market page for the official close time tied to the tournament's schedule.
Each outcome corresponds to which player is officially recorded as the winner of the first set: one outcome is George Loffhagen winning set 1 and the other is Jurij Rodionov winning set 1, including sets decided by a tiebreak when applicable.
Settlement follows the tournament's official result: if the tournament records a winner for the first set (including via retirement), that official result is used; if play never begins or the event produces no official first-set result, the market may be voided—check the platform's rulebook and market notes for final settlement policy.
Look for any prior head-to-head matches between them, recent results on the same surface, recent sets played (especially first-set records), and match statistics like serve hold percentage and break-point conversion in recent tournaments; these provide context for short-term edges in a single set.
Early service breaks or a very high first-serve win rate, a medical timeout or visible physical issue, sudden shifts in unforced-error count, and an unexpected tiebreak scenario are all events that commonly produce rapid price movements in a Set 1 market.