In this guide
Wimbledon stands as tennis's most celebrated Grand Slam tournament and attracts substantial trading volume across prediction markets. The grass surface introduces distinctive competitive patterns — powerful servers thrive, specialists accustomed to clay struggle — offering informed enthusiasts a meaningful advantage over casual market participants.
Wimbledon 2026 Odds
Men's Singles contenders (PolyGram, May 2026):
- Carlos Alcaraz: ~28-32% — Defending champion, commanding grass-court form
- Novak Djokovic: ~18-22% — Seven-time victor, maintains grass prowess
- Jannik Sinner: ~15-18% — Top-ranked player, strengthening grass capabilities
- Daniil Medvedev: ~6-9% — Historically limited grass-court success
- Jack Draper: ~5-7% — Home nation competitor, commanding serve
Women's Singles:
- Aryna Sabalenka: ~22-26%
- Iga Swiatek: ~16-20% — Historically disadvantaged on grass surfaces
- Barbora Krejcikova: ~10-14% — Current title holder
Grass Court Edge for Traders
- Serving metrics carry disproportionate weight on grass compared with clay or hard surfaces — monitor first-serve success rates and service winners closely
- Pre-Wimbledon tournaments: performances at Queen's Club and Halle provide the strongest signals for championship week outcomes
- Career grass patterns: certain athletes consistently exceed or fall short of expectations relative to their ranking on this surface
- Bracket positioning: evaluating which section of the draw presents the most favourable path for seeded competitors
FAQ
- When is Wimbledon 2026?
- The 2026 Wimbledon fortnight takes place across late June and early July, with championship matches scheduled for the second Sunday of the event.
- When do Wimbledon prediction markets resolve?
- Settlement occurs within one day following each title match, determined by official tournament records.
- Are there individual match markets for Wimbledon?
- Absolutely — PolyGram provides match-specific prediction markets throughout Wimbledon, covering all semi-final contests and championship matches across both draws.