| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reilly Opelka | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Nuno Borges | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the first set in the tennis match between Reilly Opelka and Nuno Borges. Set‑level markets matter because the opening set often sets momentum for the rest of the match and offers a different risk profile than full‑match bets.
Reilly Opelka is known for a very powerful serve and aggressive, short‑rally style, while Nuno Borges typically uses consistency, left‑handed spin and extended baseline exchanges to create breaks of rhythm. Tournament surface, recent match load, and any prior meetings between the two will shape expectations for the opening set.
Market prices reflect the collective view of traders and adjust as new information arrives (injury news, warmups, weather, betting flow). Use prices as a snapshot of market sentiment, not a guarantee of outcome, and expect intra‑day movement up to the match start or first serve depending on platform rules.
Close time is set by the platform; many exchanges close set‑level markets at or shortly before first serve, but some may allow trading into the match until the start of the relevant set—check the event page for the final close time for this market.
The winner is the player who wins the first set under the tournament’s rules (typically first to six games with a two‑game margin, and a tiebreak played if the tournament uses one at 6–6); consult the tournament rulebook if you need tiebreak specifics.
Opelka’s serve efficiency, percentage of free points, and ability to hold serve under opening‑set pressure are key—if he wins many quick service games he limits Borges’s opportunities to break early.
Borges’s return quality, consistency in long rallies, ability to exploit second serves, and left‑handed spin patterns that can disrupt Opelka’s rhythm are critical early‑set considerations.
Late developments include reported minor injuries in warmups, medical timeouts, a player withdrawing, visible fatigue, coaching/team comments, or significant weather and court‑condition changes that alter how effective serves and baseline play will be.