| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Emilio Nava | 62% | 61¢ | 62¢ | — | $104 | Trade → |
| Michael Mmoh | 37% | 36¢ | 37¢ | — | $12 | Trade → |
This market lets traders take a position on which player will win the head-to-head match between Nava and Mmoh; it matters because market prices aggregate public information about each player's chances. The outcome can move rapidly as pre-match news (injuries, withdrawals, conditions) emerges.
Nava and Mmoh are professional tennis players with differing styles and career trajectories; their matchup will be shaped by recent form, ranking, and surface preferences. Historical results between the two, recent tournaments, and any reported health or travel issues provide context that traders use to update their views.
Prediction market prices reflect the crowd’s consensus about the likely winner at any moment and change as new information arrives; treat prices as real-time signals, not guarantees, and be mindful that low liquidity can make prices more volatile.
This market’s close time is listed as TBD, so trading typically remains open until the platform announces a firm close; positions taken before closing are exposed to the full range of pre-match information, while trades near close can reflect late-breaking news and are often more volatile.
Settlement is based on the official match result as recorded by the tournament or governing body; if the platform follows common practice, an official walkover or retirement after the match starts will usually result in a win for the player who advanced, while pre-match withdrawals may be handled per the platform’s refund or nullification rules—check the platform’s event resolution policy for specifics.
Compare each player’s historical performance on the specific surface and in similar venue conditions: look at serve speed, movement patterns, success in extended rallies, and past results at the event or in the region to judge which player’s style is favored.
Head-to-head history is informative but should be contextualized by recency, surface, and whether either match was affected by injury or other anomalies; use it alongside recent form, fitness, and match conditions rather than as a sole predictor.
Yes—late injury reports, on-site practice reports, and weather or scheduling changes commonly move prices; monitor official tournament communications, player social media, and verified news sources in real time and be aware that thinly traded markets can react sharply to single reports.