| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nikoloz Basilashvili | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Patrick Kypson | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market lets traders express views on which player will win the tennis match between Kypson and Basilashvili. It matters because it aggregates public information about form, conditions, and matchup dynamics into a tradable price signal.
The event is a one-off match between the two named players as listed on the KALSHI market; outcomes will depend on tournament context, court surface, and each player’s recent form. Basilashvili is an established tour player with ATP-level experience; Kypson is the opponent listed in this market—check official player bios and the tournament draw for up-to-date background and seeding information.
Market odds represent the collective assessment of traders about which player is more likely to win and will move as new information arrives (injuries, withdrawals, weather, lineup changes). Use odds as a real-time signal, not a fixed prediction, and confirm event-specific rules on the platform before trading.
The market closure is listed as TBD; the platform operator sets the closing time and typically aligns closure with the official scheduled start or with an announced change—check the KALSHI market page for real-time updates.
This market offers the two match-result outcomes corresponding to each player winning (Kypson wins or Basilashvili wins); consult the market contract text for any additional clauses such as voiding conditions.
Adjudication follows the market’s terms: commonly a match that does not start is voided, while a match that starts is decided by the official result even if a retirement occurs; always confirm the specific adjudication rules on the KALSHI contract page.
Monitor the official match start time, tournament schedule updates, player withdrawals or medical notices, court assignment and surface, live score feeds once play begins, and news sources reporting coaching or travel issues.
Both matter: head-to-head provides matchup insight but can be misleading if based on old matches or different surfaces; prioritize recent form, surface-specific results, and current fitness while using head-to-head as one contextual input.