
Four markets determine who wins the match, whether the match goes over 2.5 sets, whether total games exceed 21.5, and who takes the second set.
Payouts depend on the head-to-head result, match length, and game pace; totals measure how competitive and close the best-of-three contest becomes.
Ivan Ivanov and Oliver Crawford are the two singles players whose serving, returning, and endurance determine the match and set outcomes.
Tournament organizers, the chair umpire, and the tournament court speed also shape playing conditions that influence game totals and momentum shifts.
Serve percentage, return aggression, and conversion of break points move set probabilities and total-games expectations quickly.
In-match injuries, variation in rally length, tiebreak frequency, and whether one player starts aggressively or tight affect whether the contest finishes in two sets or stretches to three.
Early match signals such as first-set score, number of service breaks, and time spent between points forecast set two dynamics and match duration.
Live match stats — first-serve percentage, break points won, average games per set — plus any medical timeouts or visible fatigue are the immediate triggers to track.