| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Martin Landaluce | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Karen Khachanov | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the first set of the tennis match between Martin Landaluce and Karen Khachanov. First-set outcomes matter because they set momentum for the rest of the match and are a common reference point for in-play bettors and match forecasting.
Martin Landaluce is a younger, developing player who may bring energetic baseline play and rising form; Karen Khachanov is an established tour professional known for power and experience at the ATP level. The matchup pits relative youth and upside against proven tour-level strength, and the tournament surface, scheduling, and recent match load can shift how that contrast plays out.
Market prices reflect the collective expectations of traders and react to new information like injuries, withdrawals, or late lineup changes; they are evidence of sentiment and information flow, not guarantees of any result.
The market resolves to the official first-set winner as recorded by the tournament umpire and scoring authorities. If the first set is completed, the market pays out based on that set's official result; if the set is not completed, resolution follows KALSHI's published rules for incomplete or cancelled events.
Key traits include serve power and consistency, return aggression, ability to impose tactics early, and mental composure on break points; Khachanov's experience in high-level matches and Landaluce's early-match intensity are both relevant to first-set dynamics.
If a player withdraws before play begins, the market is typically voided per platform rules; if a retirement occurs after the first set is completed, the completed set result determines resolution. If retirement happens during an incomplete first set, the market will follow KALSHI's stated policies for incomplete sets.
Head-to-head records are informative when there are multiple prior meetings, especially if they occurred recently and on the same surface; with limited or no prior meetings, look instead at recent form, results on the tournament surface, and comparable-match performance to gauge likely first-set dynamics.
The listed close time for this market is TBD; many single-set markets close at or just before the match start, and some platforms operate separate live markets during matches. Expect prices to move on late news, warm-up reports, or once match play begins if the platform supports in-play updates.