| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Valentin Vacherot | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Matteo Berrettini | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the first set in the match Matteo Berrettini vs Valentin Vacherot. First-set markets matter because they isolate early-match dynamics and can move quickly in response to serve holds, breaks, or injuries.
Matteo Berrettini is known for a powerful serve and aggressive baseline game at the ATP tour level, while Valentin Vacherot has more experience on the Challenger/ITF circuit and can be a scrappy opponent. First-set outcomes often reflect early serving performance, tactical adjustments, and how each player handles the match opening rather than the full-match endurance battle. Surface and event conditions can amplify strengths or expose vulnerabilities for each player.
Prediction market odds summarize the collective expectation of traders about who will take the first set; they update as new information arrives (lineups, warmups, delays, in-match events). Treat market prices as a real-time synthesis of publicly available factors rather than fixed forecasts.
Closing time is set by the platform and is listed as TBD here; commonly these markets close at or immediately before the match start or when the first set is about to begin, but check the platform timestamp for the official cutoff.
This market offers two mutually exclusive outcomes: Matteo Berrettini wins the first set, or Valentin Vacherot wins the first set.
Significant in-match events immediately change expectations: an early break, visible injury, or medical timeout will typically move market prices because they alter the probability of winning that specific set.
Head-to-head can be informative if there are multiple prior meetings, but many matchups have limited or no history; small sample sizes and differing match contexts mean past meetings are only one input among current form and conditions.
Prioritize recent serving stats (holds, aces, double faults), return performance (break conversion, return winners), recent match length and recovery, and surface-specific results—these variables most directly influence the probability of winning the opening set.