One match in Brazzaville decides who advances and settles multiple market contracts: the match winner and four separate totals markets (three game-lines and a sets line).
The result also moves short-term ranking points, prize money distribution, and the players' draw positions at the tournament.
Franco Ribero and Matyas Cerny are the two competitors whose match outcome determines every listed contract.
Coaches, recent opponents, and tournament officials influence preparation and scheduling, while match conditions will favor the player with better serve and stamina.
Serve effectiveness, return quality, break-point conversion, and unforced-error rates are the primary in-match levers that push totals and winner probabilities.
Pre-match form, physical freshness, head-to-head history, and the court surface (speed and bounce) change the matchup balance and expected set count.
First-set scoreline, hold-to-love frequency, and first-serve percentage will reveal early momentum and whether the match leans toward a straight-sets finish.
Look for in-match medical timeouts, late-afternoon weather shifts, and live break-point opportunities in the second and third sets; scheduled start time and preceding match length matter for recovery.