| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Luke Johnson / Jan Zielinski | 0% | 44¢ | 55¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Alexander Erler / Andrea Vavassori | 0% | 44¢ | 56¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This prediction market asks which doubles team will win the match between Johnson / Zielinski and Erler / Vavassori. It matters because market prices aggregate public expectations about the match outcome and react to new information (injuries, lineup changes, weather, etc.).
This is a head-to-head doubles matchup between two established pairs (or pairings formed for the event), where surface, recent form, and team chemistry typically shape outcomes more than single-match reputation alone. Historical results between these exact pairings may be limited, so bettors and observers often weigh recent doubles results and how each player complements their partner.
In this context, market odds represent the collective assessment of participants about which team is more likely to win, updating as new information arrives. Use them to see how expectations shift but combine market signals with match-specific facts like lineup confirmation and surface conditions.
This market has two outcomes: Johnson / Zielinski win or Erler / Vavassori win.
The market closing time is listed as TBD; trading typically closes at a set time before the match or when the match starts, so check the market page for an announced close or updates from the operator.
A sudden move usually reflects new information—examples include lineup confirmation, an injury report, withdrawal, weather or scheduling changes, or large trades shifting market consensus; verify the underlying news before reacting.
Direct head-to-head doubles results between these exact pairings are most informative; if those are scarce, look at recent doubles results for each player with other partners and their performance on the tournament's surface to gauge likely synergy and matchups.
A total volume of $0 means no trades have been recorded yet; low or zero volume can make prices more sensitive to individual trades and less reflective of broad consensus, so interpret early prices with caution.