| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leandro Riedi | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Yannick Hanfmann | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market settles on which player—Yannick Hanfmann or Leandro Riedi—wins the first set of their match. First-set markets are useful because they isolate the opening dynamics of the match (serve holds, early breaks and momentum) from later endurance and tactical adjustments.
Yannick Hanfmann is an established tour professional known for a big serve and aggressive baseline game; Leandro Riedi is a younger Swiss player who typically relies on consistency and counterpunching. The matchup balance depends heavily on surface, recent match rhythm, and whether one player starts more sharply than the other; head-to-head history, if limited, should be supplemented with surface- and form-based evidence.
Market prices reflect the aggregate expectation of traders about who will win the first set and update as new information arrives; treat them as a real-time signal of perceived likelihood rather than a certainty.
The settled outcome is determined by the official match score for the first completed set as recorded by the tournament or match officials; the player recorded as having won set 1 is the market winner.
Settlement depends on timing: if the first set was completed before a retirement, that completed set result is used; if no first set was completed the exchange will follow its official resolution policy—check the platform's rules for voiding or special-case procedures.
If set 1 goes to a tiebreak, the player who wins the tiebreak is recorded as the winner of set 1 and the market settles accordingly based on the official score.
Watch official warm-up observations, late injury updates, confirmed playing status, court/ball conditions, toss/serve order information, and live match statistics such as first-serve percentage and break-point chances in the opening games.
Head-to-head records can highlight matchup tendencies but small sample sizes are common; combine H2H with surface-specific performance, recent form, and serving/return metrics for a fuller view.