| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Roberto Bautista Agut | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Titouan Droguet | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the first set in the match between Roberto Bautista Agut and Titouan Droguet. First-set markets matter because they isolate early-match dynamics that can differ from final-match outcomes.
Roberto Bautista Agut is an experienced tour veteran known for consistency, fitness and tactical baseline play; he often starts matches methodically. Titouan Droguet is a less-established professional who may bring momentum, unpredictability and aggressive bursts at the start of matches. Because first sets can hinge on serve rhythm, early nerves and tactical adjustments, the matchup can play out differently than the eventual match winner.
Market odds represent the trading community's current consensus about who will take the first set and will move as new information arrives (lineup updates, warmup reports, weather). Use odds as a snapshot of market sentiment rather than a fixed forecast; they change up to the market close or match start.
The outcome is determined by who is officially recorded as the winner of the completed first set; a first-set tiebreak winner counts as the set winner.
Resolution depends on the platform's rulebook, but commonly markets are void if the match never starts (withdrawal/walkover) and funds are returned; check the event page for the platform's specific policy.
Settlement rules vary by platform: many markets are void if the first set is not completed, while others may follow official match statistics; confirm the exact rule on the market's policy page.
Head-to-head can be informative if they have faced each other before, showing who starts stronger, but if they have no prior meetings, recent form and stylistic matchups are more useful for first-set assessment.
Faster surfaces and favorable weather tend to reward big serving and reduce break chances, while slower surfaces increase baseline rallies and break opportunities—consider each player's service hold and return strengths under those conditions.