| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anastasia Zakharova | 71% | 69¢ | 72¢ | — | $68 | Trade → |
| Sloane Stephens | 0% | 28¢ | 31¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which competitor, Zakharova or Stephens, will win their upcoming head-to-head sporting contest. It matters because head-to-head markets condense public information about form, matchup, and conditions into a single, tradable signal.
Zakharova vs Stephens is a direct matchup between two individual athletes whose recent results, experience, and styles shape expectations. Relevant context includes any prior meetings between them, each player’s recent tournament results and fitness, and the playing surface or competition level where the match is scheduled. Because the official start time and market close are not yet posted, timing and liquidity will depend on final scheduling and confirmations.
Market odds represent the crowd’s current consensus about which player will win and will move as new information arrives; use them as a live summary of expectations rather than a fixed forecast. Sudden news—injuries, withdrawals, or schedule changes—can produce rapid price shifts.
The market close is listed as TBD; it will typically close shortly before the match begins once the event time is confirmed—watch the event page for the official close time.
This is a two-outcome market: one outcome for Zakharova to win and one for Stephens to win. Check the platform’s settlement rules for edge cases like retirements, walkovers, or matches not played.
Resolution depends on the platform’s rules: commonly, if the match never starts the market may be voided, while if play starts any official result (including retirements) typically determines the winner—confirm the event’s specific settlement policy on the platform.
Prior head-to-head meetings (if any), each player’s recent win-loss form, performance on the scheduled surface, recent match load and travel, and any recorded injuries or medical timeouts are most informative.
Late injury reports, official withdrawals, changes in match start time, weather delays, and live-match developments (e.g., early-set scores or medical timeouts) are the primary drivers of rapid price movement.