| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cameron Norrie wins 2-1 | 0% | 14¢ | 37¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Rinky Hijikata wins 2-1 | 0% | 2¢ | 23¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Rinky Hijikata wins 2-0 | 0% | 2¢ | 25¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Cameron Norrie wins 2-0 | 0% | 36¢ | 59¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which exact final match score will occur in the tennis match between Rinky Hijikata and Cameron Norrie; it matters because it lets traders express views on not just the winner but the specific scoreline and competitiveness of the match.
Hijikata and Norrie are touring professionals whose relative styles, recent results, and familiarity with the tournament surface shape expectations for how a match might play out. Context such as tournament round, court surface, and recent head-to-head or tour form will influence how tightly contested each set is and therefore the range of realistic exact scores.
Market odds reflect the collective view of traders about which precise scoreline is most likely and will move as new information arrives (injury news, lineup updates, on-court developments). They are signals about relative likelihoods, not guarantees.
Each outcome corresponds to a specific final scoreline (set-by-set, including any official tiebreak scores where relevant); only the outcome that exactly matches the tournament's official final score is settled as a winner.
Settlement follows the platform's published rules (this market is offered on KALSHI): if the match does not start trades are typically voided, while if play begins the market is settled to the official scoreboard at the time play is stopped or completed according to tournament records.
The close time for this specific market is listed as TBD; typically such markets close shortly before the match starts or whenever trading is suspended by the operator, so check the platform for the final closing timestamp.
Head-to-head gives insight into matchup dynamics (who tends to control rallies, break serve, or force tiebreaks) but is only one input — combine it with surface, recent form, and fitness to form expectations about likely scorelines.
Watch for early breaks of serve, medical timeouts or visible injury, weather or scheduling delays, dominant serving performance or rapid momentum swings (e.g., a long tiebreak), as these materially change the range of plausible exact final scores.