2025 French Open - Women’s singles - Finals & Selected matches
21
500Ṁ17k
resolved Jun 7
Resolved
NO
Final: Aryna Sabalenka (Yes) - 🇺🇸 Coco Gauff (No)
Resolved
NO
Semifinals: 🇫🇷 Loïs Boisson (Yes) - 🇺🇸 Coco Gauff (No)
Resolved
YES
Semifinals: Aryna Sabalenka (Yes) - 🇵🇱 Iga Świątek (No)
Resolved
NO
Quarterfinals: Mirra Andreeva (Yes) - 🇫🇷 Loïs Boisson (No)
Resolved
NO
Quarterfinals: 🇺🇸 Madison Keys (Yes) - 🇺🇸 Coco Gauff (No)
Resolved
NO
Quarterfinals:🇺🇦 Elina Svitolina (Yes) - 🇵🇱 Iga Świątek (No)
Resolved
YES
Quarterfinals: Aryna Sabalenka (Yes) - 🇨🇳 Zheng Qinwen (No)

2025 French Open - Women’s singles (Wikipedia)

This is a market for a 2025 FO Women’s singles finals and other notable matches. It will be filled during the tournament.

  • Update 2025-05-15 (PST) (AI summary of creator comment): The creator has clarified player ordering for market options:

    • In the Final, Player #1 (the first player listed for the match) will be the participant from the top half of the draw, and Player #2 (the second player listed) will be from the bottom half.

    • For matches generally, player pairings are typically taken from Wikipedia, and the creator does not switch player's places within a single match as presented by the source.

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@traders thanks to everyone for trading on this market, see you all next year, in July on a Wimbledon market, or on a men’s singles finals market tomorrow! 👍

sold Ṁ7 NO

Oof

@benmanns thanks for taking interest in my tennis markets, I noticed that you’ve just moved the probability on Final from 74% back to 50% as it was by default. What I have to say about that - is that probability of >50% here is actually sort of makes sense since on such markets I basically take these pairs of players from Wikipedia (and, like, I don’t switch player’s places within a single match), and in Final the player #1 will come from the top half of the table, while the player #2 - from the bottom half, and, well, top half is where world’s number one player starts, etc. So basically we seems to already be knowing that the player #1 in a final’s pair is a bit more likely to win…

This actually also applies to some other pairs here, I guess.

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