Who wins the match and how the scoring markets resolve: match winner, game totals at multiple thresholds (21.5, 22.5, 23.5), set handicap, and total sets.
The outcome decides who advances in Rome's clay draw and settles several linked betting lines tied to games and sets.
Jan-Lennard Struff and Jiri Lehecka are the deciding players; both rely on big serves and aggressive baseline strokes.
Tournament officials, each player's coach and physio, and the clay surface itself influence preparation, movement, and whether fatigue or niggles determine shorter or longer matches.
Serve effectiveness, first-serve percentage, and break-point conversion will swing short service holds and total game counts.
Clay-specific factors—movement, sliding, topspin and longer rallies—plus current form, any minor injuries, and weather-driven court speed alter set length and tiebreak likelihood.
Look for pre-match practice notes, how each player moves in warm-ups, and any medical or physical updates before first serve.
During the match, track first-serve %, break points saved/converted, aces vs double faults, momentum after long rallies, and any rain or scheduling delays that change court conditions.