| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jack Draper | 0% | 73¢ | 98¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Roberto Bautista Agut | 0% | 19¢ | 98¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market resolves on who wins the first set between Roberto Bautista Agut and Jack Draper. It matters because the first set often sets momentum for the match and is a common short-form outcome for traders and tennis fans.
Roberto Bautista Agut is a seasoned baseline player known for consistency, tactical point construction, and mental steadiness in crucial moments. Jack Draper is a younger, powerful player with a big serve and aggressive groundstrokes; his matches can turn quickly when his serve and timing are clicking. Surface, recent form, and any lingering fitness issues for either player can materially affect how the first set plays out.
Market prices reflect the collective expectations of traders about who will take the first set and adjust as new information arrives (lineups, warmups, in-match flow). Treat odds as dynamic signals that can change with pre-match news and live developments during the set.
It asks which player wins the first set of the match between Bautista Agut and Draper; the market settles on the player who takes that set according to the official match scoring.
The close time is listed as TBD on the event page; trading windows are determined by the platform — check the market page for the official close time, which is commonly tied to the start of the set or a short window thereafter.
Settlement rules vary by platform, but typical outcomes are: the market is voided if the first set never starts, or settled to the player who won the first set if it was completed; consult the platform's official event settlement policy for definitive guidance.
Recent matches between the two and each player’s performance in opening sets are most relevant — look for patterns like how often a player breaks early, wins opening sets against opponents with similar styles, and any recent shifts in serve/return effectiveness.
Use live indicators such as early break opportunities, first-serve effectiveness, visible movement or discomfort, and momentum swings; these factors tend to have immediate relevance for the first-set outcome and are reflected quickly in market pricing.