
A match win sends the victor into the next Swiss Open round and settles the primary markets: match winner, match total games, total sets, set‑1 games, and set handicaps.
Payouts depend on whether the match ends in two sets or three and on the exact number of games played, so set length and game margins matter as much as the final winner.
Federico Cina and Quentin Halys are the two competitors; Halys is the more established tour player while Cina is a lower-ranked challenger aiming for an upset.
Form, serve consistency, return quality and any late fitness updates from either player will shape hold/break patterns and market pricing.
Serve efficiency and return break rates move prices: many service holds compress totals and favor straight-set outcomes, while frequent breaks inflate game and set totals.
Pre-match injury reports, warm-up form, in-match medical timeouts, and changing court or weather conditions are the main causal levers for live-market shifts.
Match start time, court assignment and the official warm-up are immediate checks before markets close or live betting opens.
Monitor first‑serve percentage, break points saved/conceded, games per set in the opening two sets, and any official injury or withdrawal notices that arrive before or during the match.