| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tomas Martin Etcheverry | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Rafael Jodar | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the first set of the match between Rafael Jodar and Tomas Martin Etcheverry. First-set outcomes matter because they set momentum and create distinct in-play trading opportunities.
Tomas Martin Etcheverry is a tour-level player known for his baseline game and experience on clay; Rafael Jodar may be a less-established or lower-profile opponent depending on the tournament entry list. Surface, tournament level, recent match load and each player's familiarity with event conditions provide important background for this matchup.
Market odds reflect the aggregated views of traders about who is most likely to take the first set at the time of quotation; they update in real time and should be interpreted as a snapshot of market expectations rather than a guarantee.
Settlement follows the official match record: the market settles once an official first-set winner is posted by the tournament or governing body. If no official set-1 result is produced, the exchange will follow its published settlement rules.
The market uses the tournament’s official result: the player who wins the set under tournament rules (including any tiebreak) is recorded as the set-1 winner.
The market follows the official match scoring: if officials record a set-1 winner as a result of retirement or default, that outcome is used. If officials do not produce an official set-1 result, the exchange’s settlement guidelines will apply.
Consult the tournament’s live scoring page, official tour sites (ATP/ITF as applicable), reputable live-stat providers and tournament broadcasters for first-serve percentages, break-point opportunities and point-by-point updates relevant to set 1.
Look at both players’ recent short-format results (sets/first-set records), practice and warm-up reports, any reported niggles or travel fatigue, historical starts (whether they tend to start fast or slow), and how they typically perform on the match’s surface.