| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nicolas Jarry | 81% | 81¢ | 84¢ | — | $1M | Trade → |
| Francesco Maestrelli | 18% | 15¢ | 18¢ | — | $872K | Trade → |
This market is a head-to-head matchup between Jarry and Maestrelli where traders take positions on which player will win the match. It matters because the market aggregates public information and reacts to news that can change the perceived likelihood of each outcome.
Context for this pairing includes the tournament level, match surface, and each player's recent activity on tour; those elements shape expectations heading into the match. Historical meetings between the two, if any, and their most recent results provide useful background, while travel, scheduling and recovery time can also be decisive.
Market prices reflect the crowd's assessment of who will win but are dynamic and update as new information arrives; interpret shifts as signals of changing expectations rather than fixed predictions.
This market offers two outcomes: Jarry wins the match or Maestrelli wins the match. Settlement will follow the official match result as determined by the exchange's rules.
The market close time is listed on the market page and is currently TBD; check the live market page for updates because exchanges typically set closure at or before the scheduled match start and can adjust for delays.
Settlement in the case of a pre-match withdrawal or an in-match retirement follows the exchange's settlement policy—typically based on the official match status—so consult the market rules or announcements for the definitive procedure.
Price moves are usually driven by injury or medical news, official withdrawal notices, late changes in court assignment or surface conditions, weather delays, live match developments, and large single trades or position shifts.
Both matter: head-to-head provides direct matchup insight but can be misleading if it occurred on a different surface or long ago; recent form, physical condition, and current tournament context often give a better picture of short-term performance.