| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amanda Anisimova | 73% | 72¢ | 73¢ | — | $3K | Trade → |
| Emma Raducanu | 29% | 28¢ | 29¢ | — | $391 | Trade → |
This is a two-outcome market on who will win the tennis match between Emma Raducanu and Amanda Anisimova. It matters to traders who want exposure to a single-match result and to observers assessing relative form and tournament implications for both players.
Both players are young professionals with notable Grand Slam results in their career histories; Raducanu rose quickly after a major title, and Anisimova has produced deep Slam runs and powerful baseline play. Each has shown periods of strong performance and inconsistency, so match context — surface, recent matches, and fitness — often drives expectations more than ranking alone.
Market prices reflect the collective expectation of participants at a given moment and will move as new information arrives (injury news, withdrawals, lineup confirmations, live-match developments). Treat prices as a dynamic signal rather than a fixed forecast.
This market is built around the match winner between Raducanu and Anisimova; it typically settles on the official winner recorded by the tournament organizers. Check the market page for any special settlement language.
A market with 'Closes: TBD' means the exchange will set the precise closing time once the match schedule is finalized; markets of this type generally close shortly before the scheduled match start. Monitor the market page for updates and official announcements.
Settlement normally follows the official result recorded by the tournament: an in-match retirement is usually settled to the player who is awarded the match, while pre-match walkovers or cancellations may be handled per the exchange’s rules (voiding or special settlement). Always consult the market’s rules and announcements for the definitive policy.
Use head-to-head and recent results as context: focus on matches on the same surface, recency of the performances, and whether matches were completed or affected by retirements. Small sample sizes or results from different conditions should be weighted cautiously.
Late-breaking items that commonly move prices include official injury updates, withdrawals, weather or schedule changes, coach or team announcements, and live-match events (medical timeouts, momentum shifts). Pre-match practice reports and official lineups can also influence the market.