| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ignacio Buse | 21% | 0¢ | 99¢ | — | $111 | Trade → |
| Liam Draxl | 0% | 0¢ | 100¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the first set in the Ignacio Buse vs Liam Draxl match. It matters because first-set outcomes capture short-term match dynamics and provide a way to trade on in-play momentum separate from the overall match result.
Ignacio Buse and Liam Draxl are professional tennis players whose match-up for this event produces a short, high-variance betting horizon: the first set. First-set markets emphasize fast starts, serving performance, and early tactical edges rather than the endurance and adjustments that shape later sets. Because conditions and in-match events can change quickly, set-level markets often move rapidly as new information becomes available.
Market odds reflect the collective views and incoming information from traders and will move as factors like starting lineups, injuries, or weather are reported. Use the odds as a real-time signal of market sentiment about short-term match developments, not as immutable predictions.
Close times are set by the trading platform; commonly markets close at or just before the official match start or when the first set result becomes inevitable. Because this event lists the close time as TBD, check the platform for the final close time and any last-minute announcements.
The winner is the player officially recorded as having won the first set according to the match referee or tournament scorekeeper; a tiebreak winner is the set winner. If the set is not completed due to cancellation or other exceptional circumstances, settlement follows the platform's rules for incomplete matches.
Head-to-head and recent results can indicate who typically starts faster or handles specific tactical matchups, but first-set outcomes are also sensitive to short-term factors like serve rhythm and early nerves. Use historical patterns as context while weighting live signals such as warmups, withdrawal news, or reported injuries more heavily for set markets.
A tiebreak is part of the first set, so the player who wins the tiebreak is the first-set winner for settlement. If an unusual scoring change occurs that prevents a tiebreak from being played, the official match result used by the tournament determines settlement in accordance with platform rules.
If a player retires after the first set is completed, the completed-set result stands for settlement; if the match is abandoned before the first set finishes or never starts, many platforms void or cancel the market per their terms. Always consult the specific platform's event rules to confirm how these situations are resolved for this market.