| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jannik Sinner | 94% | 93¢ | 95¢ | — | $791 | Trade → |
| Dalibor Svrcina | 6% | 5¢ | 6¢ | — | $205 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the Svrcina vs Sinner match. It matters because it captures market expectations about a contest between an established top-level player and a rising opponent, which can reflect form, matchup dynamics, and news flow.
Jannik Sinner is an established top-tier player on the ATP Tour; Dalibor Svrčina (listed here as Svrcina) is a younger Czech player who has pushed through challengers and occasional main-draw matches. Matches between a top seed and a developing player often feature a contrast of experience versus momentum, and outcomes can be influenced by surface, recent schedule, and match conditions.
Market odds represent the aggregated views of participants and adjust as new information (injury reports, withdrawals, weather, scheduling) becomes available; they are not guarantees of outcome but a realtime indicator of market sentiment and perceived relative chances.
This market offers two mutually exclusive outcomes corresponding to which player wins the match: a Svrcina win or a Sinner win. The market resolves to the officially reported match winner.
Close time is listed as TBD; typically the market closes shortly before the match start or when an official start time is posted. The market resolves after the match is completed and an official result is available from the tournament.
If a player withdraws before the match starts, the market typically resolves according to the platform’s rules for walkovers or cancellations (often the non-withdrawing player wins or the market is voided depending on timing). If a player retires during play, official match rules usually record the remaining player as the winner and the market resolves to that outcome.
Head-to-head provides direct matchup evidence: look at past results, surfaces, and match conditions. A single past meeting is informative but should be considered alongside recent form, surface, and any tactical adjustments since their last encounter.
Late-breaking items that typically move the market include official injury updates, player withdrawals, confirmed start time changes or scheduling delays, and pre-match warmup reports from the tournament. Significant changes to court or weather conditions on match day can also shift expectations.