| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brandon Nakashima / Frances Tiafoe | 35% | 23¢ | 34¢ | — | $127 | Trade → |
| Kevin Krawietz / Tim Putz | 75% | 64¢ | 75¢ | — | $71 | Trade → |
This market asks which doubles team will win the match between Nakashima/Tiafoe and Krawietz/Puetz. It matters because it contrasts an ad‑hoc pairing of high-level singles players with an established specialist doubles team, creating a matchup driven by different strengths.
Brandon Nakashima and Frances Tiafoe are primarily singles players who occasionally play doubles; their pairing brings power, athleticism, and strong baseline/return games but less established partnership time. Kevin Krawietz and Tim Pütz are experienced doubles specialists with significant tour-level and Grand Slam doubles experience, bringing practiced teamwork, positioning, and net tactics. The tournament, surface, and match timing (all of which materially affect the matchup) will determine how those contrasting profiles interact.
Market prices on this page represent the crowd’s realtime view of which team is expected to win given available information; they update as new information (injuries, withdrawals, lineup confirmations, weather, form) becomes available and should be treated as a snapshot rather than a fixed forecast.
The market offers two outcomes corresponding to the match winner: one outcome is Nakashima/Tiafoe winning the match, and the other is Krawietz/Puetz winning the match. The market resolves to the official match result reported by the tournament.
The close time is listed as TBD on the market; typically markets close at the tournament’s official match start time. Check the market page for the confirmed close time and any updates if the match is rescheduled or delayed.
Singles players bring power, speed and strong baseline/return abilities that can create opportunities, but they may lack practiced doubles positioning and coordinated poaching. Doubles specialists offer superior teamwork, net control and tactical serving patterns that can neutralize raw power. Match outcome often hinges on which side imposes its strengths more consistently.
Surface matters a lot: faster hard courts and grass favor aggressive serving and quick finishes that benefit big servers and strong returners, while slower clay courts reward consistent point construction, movement and extended net exchanges where experienced doubles tactics can be decisive.
Resolution follows the tournament’s official result and the platform’s event rules. Commonly, a withdrawal before the official start leads to a walkover and the opponent is recorded as the winner; postponements can delay market close or extend trading until the new start time. Check the market page and Kalshi’s official resolution policies for how cancellations, no‑matches, and walkovers are handled for this specific event.