| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maria Sakkari | 68% | 66¢ | 68¢ | — | $24 | Trade → |
| Lilli Tagger | 0% | 32¢ | 34¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the tennis match between Sakkari and Tagger; it matters to traders who want to express views on the match outcome or hedge exposure to player performance.
Sakkari is an established WTA-level player known for aggressive baseline play and athletic defense; Tagger is the opposing player in this matchup and may be a rising, lower-profile, or stylistically different opponent. Match outcome will depend on tournament context (round, crowd, court surface) and both players' recent form and health.
Market prices are a real-time aggregation of traders' expectations about who will win, and they move as new information arrives (injuries, withdrawals, practice reports, weather, etc.). Interpret price moves as shifts in collective belief and in reaction to fresh, event-specific news rather than as definitive forecasts.
Each outcome represents the match winner: one outcome is resolved if Sakkari wins the official match and the other if Tagger wins; resolution follows the tournament’s official result as reported by the event organizer and the market platform.
Closure timing is set by the platform and typically aligns with the scheduled start or official completion of the match; if the schedule changes the platform will update the market and announce a close or resolution timing accordingly.
If the match has started, a retirement or in-match disqualification is usually treated as a win for the opponent who advances; if a player withdraws before play (a walkover) the platform’s stated rules determine whether the market is voided or resolved, so check the market’s resolution rules.
Watch official withdrawal notices, injury updates from either team, practice reports, late-weather forecasts, draw changes elsewhere in the tournament, and media interviews or coach comments that speak to fitness or strategy.
Low volume means limited liquidity: small trades can move prices substantially, spreads can be wide, and prices are more susceptible to short-term noise, so interpret moves with caution and expect higher volatility if larger orders are placed.