| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dusan Lajovic | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Hugo Grenier | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the match between Lajovic and Grenier; it aggregates trader views on who is likeliest to win and reacts to pre-match information. It matters because market prices provide a continuously updated summary of available public information about the match outcome.
Both players are professional tour competitors whose matchup dynamics depend on form, surface, and recent scheduling. Historical meetings between them, if any, and the level of the tournament (main tour, challenger, qualifying) provide useful context for how they match up stylistically and mentally.
Market prices represent the collective expectation of market participants about which player will win and will move as new public information arrives (injuries, withdrawals, weather, lineups, etc.). Use prices as a real-time signal rather than a fixed prediction, and factor in liquidity and recent trade activity when interpreting moves.
If the event time is TBD, the market will remain open until the official match start time is published; most platforms close trading shortly before the official start. Watch platform notifications for the announced closing time.
This market offers binary outcomes corresponding to each player winning the match (Lajovic wins or Grenier wins). Tennis matches do not produce ties; settlement follows the official match winner reported by the tournament.
Settlement follows the platform's rules: a pre-match withdrawal typically voids or cancels the market or is settled according to official tournament procedures, while an in-match retirement usually awards the match win to the remaining player per the official result.
Check each player's historical performance on the relevant surface: some players perform markedly better on clay, hard, or grass. Surface affects ball speed, bounce, and typical rally patterns, which can shift matchup advantages.
Markets tend to update quickly after verifiable public news, but the speed and magnitude of price movement depend on liquidity—low-volume markets may move more slowly until traders execute new bets that incorporate the information.