| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hugo Nys / Edouard Roger-Vasselin | 59% | 47¢ | 59¢ | — | $6 | Trade → |
| Karen Khachanov / Andrey Rublev | 0% | 40¢ | 51¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which doubles team will win the match between Nys / Roger-Vasselin and Khachanov / Rublev. It matters for traders who want to express a view on head-to-head matchups between established doubles specialists and pairs featuring top singles players.
The matchup pits a team built around a player with a strong doubles pedigree (Roger-Vasselin) alongside Nys, against a pairing of two high-profile singles players, Khachanov and Rublev, who sometimes play doubles in team competitions or tournaments. Outcomes in doubles often reflect a mix of doubles-specific skills, team chemistry, and the singles players' willingness to play aggressive net and coordination-based tennis rather than just baseline power.
Prediction market prices reflect the balance of money and beliefs among participants about who will win this particular match. Use them as a real-time summary of market expectations, remembering they can move quickly in response to news like withdrawals, lineup changes, or weather.
The event page lists the close time as TBD; markets of this type typically close at or just before the official match start time. Check the market page for updates and final close time before trading.
This market trades two outcomes: a win for Nys / Roger-Vasselin or a win for Khachanov / Rublev, settled on the official match winner as reported by the tournament.
A player with established doubles experience brings specialized skills—poaching, coordinated positioning, and doubles tactics—that can offset raw power from singles players, particularly in pressure points and typical doubles patterns.
Both are primarily singles players who have played doubles in select events or team competitions; their effectiveness in doubles depends on how comfortable they are at the net, their communication as a pair, and how they adjust strategy away from singles baseline rallies.
Key drivers include official lineup confirmations or withdrawals, injury reports, weather or scheduling delays, late team announcements, and any tournament-specific format changes (e.g., deciding-set tiebreak rules).