| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pavel Kotov | 0% | 41¢ | 44¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Clement Chidekh | 0% | 55¢ | 58¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market covers the head-to-head outcome of the match between Kotov and Chidekh; it aggregates trader expectations about which player will win and can signal how information is being interpreted ahead of the official result.
Kotov vs Chidekh is a single-match market reflecting a specific contest between two professional players; relevant context includes their recent match results, surface preferences, and any prior meetings between them. Because tournament round, scheduling and travel can alter match dynamics, those factors commonly shape pre-match expectations.
Market prices represent the consensus view of participants and will move as new information (injury news, withdrawals, weather, lineups) becomes available; use price movements as a realtime signal of changing expectations rather than a fixed prediction.
This market trades the two standard outcomes: Kotov wins or Chidekh wins. Settlement follows the exchange's official rules based on the tournament's published result or official scoreboard; consult the market terms for details on special cases.
Handling of postponements depends on the exchange policy: markets may remain open, pause trading, extend to the new match time, or be voided. The market's description and the exchange's rules explain the specific treatment.
Review prior matches for surface, scorelines, and match conditions to understand stylistic advantages, but weight those insights against current form, injury reports, and the tournament context since past results may not reflect present circumstances.
Late-breaking items that commonly shift the market are official injury or withdrawal notices, on-site medical reports, confirmed starting times, weather updates for outdoor matches, and credible quotes from players or coaches indicating fitness or tactical changes.
Settlement rules vary by exchange: an on-court retirement is typically settled in favor of the player who advances, while pre-match walkovers may be voided or settled according to the market's terms. Always check the exchange's settlement policy for exact handling.