| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gabriel Diallo | 0% | 47¢ | 98¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Mattia Bellucci | 0% | 45¢ | 98¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player, Mattia Bellucci or Gabriel Diallo, will win the first set of their match. It matters for short-term traders and tennis fans who want to trade on immediate match dynamics rather than the final result.
Bellucci and Diallo are professional male tennis players whose styles, recent form, and familiarity with the tournament surface will shape expectations for the opening set. First sets often reflect early-match fitness, serve rhythm, and how quickly each player adapts to conditions; momentum from the first set can also influence the remainder of the match.
Market odds express the aggregated expectations of traders about who will take the first set and will move as new information arrives (e.g., injury news, lineup confirmations, weather). Interpret changes in odds as market reactions to updated information and shifting perceived advantages between the two players.
It refers to which player is officially recorded as winning the first set of their match. If a tiebreak decides the set, the tiebreak winner is the set winner; settlement will follow the match’s official recorded first-set result.
A TBD close means the market’s official trading cut-off hasn’t been set publicly; trading typically closes at or shortly before the match start or when event-specific conditions are finalized. Watch for updates from the event platform announcing the exact close time.
Yes — direct head-to-head results and past small-sample encounters can reveal matchup advantages (e.g., one player consistently winning quick exchanges). If they haven’t met before, compare each player’s records against similar opponents and styles to gauge likely first-set dynamics.
Surface affects serve effectiveness, rally length, and movement. On faster courts, powerful servers and short-point winners tend to hold serve more often, while slower courts favor returners and longer rallies where one player can wear the other down in set 1.
Settlement follows the platform’s official event rules: if a player withdraws before the match starts, the market is typically void or settled per stated policy; if play begins but the first set is not completed due to retirement, the market will settle based on the official match report or according to the platform’s specific rules for incomplete sets.