| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| David Goffin | 18% | 15¢ | 17¢ | — | $211K | Trade → |
| Chun Hsin Tseng | 83% | 83¢ | 84¢ | — | $107K | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the match between Tseng and Goffin; it matters because head-to-head match markets aggregate public information about form, injuries, and other match-day variables into tradable prices.
Tseng and Goffin are the two named competitors in a scheduled tennis matchup; outcomes will affect their immediate tournament progress and can influence ranking points and public perception. Historical matchups, recent results on the same surface, and each player’s current fitness and schedule are typical background elements market participants consider.
Market prices summarize how traders collectively assess the relative chances of each named outcome and change as new information (injury reports, weather, withdrawals, line-up confirmations) becomes available; consult the market page for the definitive, time-stamped price history rather than treating any single quote as final.
This market is binary and will resolve to one of two outcomes corresponding to the officially recorded match winner for Tseng vs Goffin; consult the market rules for the exact settlement timestamp and data sources used to determine the official winner.
The event lists a closing time as TBD; markets often close at the scheduled match start or at a time specified by the market operator, so check the market page for the official closing time and monitor announcements for any rescheduling.
Typically an official walkover before play starts may void or be refunded according to market rules, while an in-match retirement usually results in settlement to the player recorded as the official winner at the time of the retirement; always refer to the market’s settlement rules for precise handling.
Head-to-head history offers useful context—showing past tactical matchups and patterns—but should be weighed alongside recent form, surface, fitness, and any changes in coaching or strategy rather than treated as determinative on its own.
Late injury or illness reports, official withdrawal or lineup confirmations, unexpected weather or court condition changes, and large trades or concentrated betting on one outcome can all move market prices quickly for this match.