| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reilly Opelka | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Taylor Fritz | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the match between Reilly Opelka and Taylor Fritz, a head-to-head contest between two top ATP competitors. It matters because their contrasting styles and ranking implications make the match informative for bettors, fans, and season standings.
Opelka is a 6'11" big-server who frequently wins free points on serve and pressures opponents with heavy serving; Fritz is an all-court baseliner with strong movement, a solid return game, and the ability to construct points. Their past meetings have shown that serve dominance versus return consistency is the central tactical theme, and outcomes often depend on small margins in a few pivotal games.
Market odds reflect the collective expectations of traders and move as new information arrives (injuries, lineups, weather, etc.). Interpret changes in the market as signals about how others are updating on match-specific factors rather than fixed predictions.
This market offers two mutually exclusive outcomes corresponding to which player wins the match; the winning player on the official match result determines resolution.
Resolution follows the platform's rules: typically the market resolves when an official match result is posted for the rescheduled contest, or is voided/refunded if the event is cancelled per the marketplace policy.
Head-to-head provides useful context about matchup tendencies, but traders should combine it with current form, surface, and recent match conditions rather than relying on historical results alone.
Late injury updates, official surface/court type announcements, start-time/weather changes, and notable lineup or coaching news typically cause the largest and fastest market adjustments.
Most platforms settle based on the official match result reported by tournament authorities: a mid-match retirement counts as a win for the opponent unless platform rules specify otherwise, so check the market's settlement policy for edge cases.