| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quentin Halys | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Kamil Majchrzak | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player, Quentin Halys or Kamil Majchrzak, will win the first set of their match. First-set markets matter because they isolate the opening-phase advantage and are sensitive to serve order, early breaks, and match tempo.
Quentin Halys is typically known for a big serve and aggressive baseline game, while Kamil Majchrzak is often characterized by steady defense and solid return play. Past results, surface type, and recent match rhythm influence how each player performs in opening sets; small matchup edges can decide a single set even when full-match outcomes are closer.
Market odds aggregate participant expectations about who will win set one and will move as new information arrives (lineups, warmups, in-play events). Treat prices as real-time reflections of perceived edge, not fixed forecasts.
If the first set finishes normally, the market settles to the player officially recorded as winning that set (including a tiebreak winner) according to the match officials.
If the first set is not completed, settlement depends on the platform’s official rules; many platforms require an official completed set to declare a winner and may void or follow stated tournament settlement procedures, so check the event’s settlement policy.
Yes — the initial server can have an early advantage because holding serve in the opening games reduces break opportunities for the opponent, so knowing who serves first and each player’s first-game serving statistics is relevant.
Look at head-to-head meetings between the two, recent first-set records on the tournament surface, each player’s serve-and-return metrics (holds, breaks, double faults) in recent matches, and any recent match-play or warm-up results.
Early service breaks, a string of double faults, an obvious injury or medical timeout, sudden weather or court-condition changes, or an unexpectedly dominant service hold will be the biggest drivers of mid-match price movement.