| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Garrett Johns | 21% | 15¢ | 24¢ | — | $78K | Trade → |
| Marco Trungelliti | 81% | 75¢ | 82¢ | — | $50K | Trade → |
This market wagers on which player will win the single match between Trungelliti and Johns; it matters because it aggregates real-time expectations about who will prevail and reacts to new information (injuries, scheduling, conditions).
Trungelliti is an experienced tour-level competitor whose matches often appear on markets when he faces peers at ATP/Challenger events; Johns is the opposing entrant listed for this matchup. The matchup’s context — tournament level, surface, and position in the draw — helps traders and fans judge how meaningful a win is for ranking points and momentum.
Market prices reflect the crowd’s evolving view of who will win and will move as new information arrives; use them as a summary of market sentiment rather than a fixed prediction.
The listing shows the close time as TBD; individual markets often close at the scheduled match start or when the platform sets a cutoff — check the market page for the live close time and any updates.
Settlement normally follows the official match result reported by the tournament organizers: the player declared the winner is the settled winner. Specific platform rules govern special cases such as retirements or disqualifications.
Monitor official start time and court assignment, late injury or withdrawal news, warmup reports, and weather updates — any of these can change the expected outcome or cause postponement.
Treatment varies by platform but commonly an official walkover or retirement counts as a win for the remaining player; if a match is never played, some markets may be voided and funds returned per platform resolution policy — consult the market rules for exact procedures.
Use the tournament’s official site and live scoring, the players’ official channels, and the market page for real-time pricing and notices; official tournament communications typically drive how the market should be interpreted and settled.