18 more outcomes Listed by current odds
- Coco Gauff 4.3% $0.043
- Amanda Anisimova 4.1% $0.041
- Naomi Osaka 3.8% $0.038
- Madison Keys 3.7% $0.037
- Linda Nosková 3.3% $0.033
- Barbora Krejčíková 2.5% $0.025
- Marta Kostyuk 2.5% $0.025
- Belinda Bencic 2.3% $0.023
- Anna Kalinskaya 1.3% $0.013
- Emma Navarro 1% $0.01
- Jasmine Paolini 0.7% $0.007
- Jelena Ostapenko 0.7% $0.007
- Liudmila Samsonova 0.6% $0.006
- Ekaterina Alexandrova 0.6% $0.006
- Marie Bouzková 0.6% $0.006
- Maria Sakkari 0.4% $0.004
- Ashlyn Krueger 0.4% $0.004
- Elise Mertens 0.4% $0.004
Odds, liquidity, volume, and open interest are sourced from Polymarket and last synced at Jul 3, 2026 8:37 am.
Probability history
Market details
- Resolution criteria
- Wimbledon 2026 is scheduled for June 29 - July 12, 2026.
- Category
- Sports › Tennis
- Close date
- July 12, 2026, 12:00 AM UTC
- Settlement source
- Wimbledon
- Market rules summary
- Multi-outcome Polymarket event. Each listed option is represented by its Yes price on the underlying market. View full rules
Sabalenka’s Early Lead Faces Wimbledon’s Grass-Court Volatility Test
The board gives the clearest early vote to proven top-end profiles and durability, while its long tail says Wimbledon can punish consensus quickly. The useful question is which assumptions must survive another season, a draw, and two weeks on grass.
Sabalenka’s 23.5% price gives the 2026 women’s Wimbledon market a clear first name, but the broader structure is closer to a durability test than a coronation. With Rybakina at 12.5%, Świątek at 9.6%, Pegula at 7.1%, and a wide middle tier below them, the pricing says early conviction is concentrated while the field still carries many live routes before the champion is confirmed by Wimbledon.
Sabalenka’s separation prices continuity as the first filter
Inferred from the odds, Sabalenka is being treated as the player most likely to preserve enough status, form, and availability through July 2026 to justify a standalone lead. That matters because an event dated June 29 to July 12, 2026 sits far enough away for injury, ranking movement, and surface-specific results to change the hierarchy, yet close enough for current elite reputation to anchor early pricing.
The lead also signals that the market is giving more weight to a repeatable top-tier profile than to a pure long-shot grass surprise. A 23.5% Yes price still leaves most probability outside the leader, which keeps the field central to the story even as one name anchors the board.
Rybakina and Świątek encode two different grass assumptions
Rybakina’s 12.5% and Świątek’s 9.6% form the market’s cleanest second argument: Wimbledon-specific confidence receives a separate treatment from generic elite status. The gap matters because it suggests the board is separating the chance to command attention over a season from the chance to convert one grass fortnight into a title.
That distinction can persist if grass preparation and the draw reinforce it. It can weaken quickly if Świątek posts convincing Wimbledon results or if Rybakina’s path becomes more fragile through form, fitness, or seeding. Because the event resolves only to the official Wimbledon winner, narrative reputation has limited influence once match-by-match survival starts feeding the market.
The middle tier prices many ways for the favorite path to fracture
Pegula at 7.1%, Muchová at 4.6%, Gauff at 4.3%, Anisimova at 4.0%, Osaka at 3.8%, and Keys at 3.7% show how the market distributes contingency. None is close to the leader, yet together they represent the mechanism that keeps a favorite from absorbing too much of the board: one injury update, upset, or favorable draw pocket can redirect attention to this cluster.
| Market band | Examples | Implied role |
|---|---|---|
| Leader | Sabalenka, 23.5% | Continuity, status, and draw tolerance are priced highest. |
| Second line | Rybakina, 12.5%; Świątek, 9.6% | Grass-specific conviction shapes the ordering. |
| Middle cluster | Pegula, Muchová, Gauff, Anisimova, Osaka, Keys | Bracket openings or strong tune-ups can shift focus quickly. |
| Outer names | Paolini, Samsonova, Mertens, Sakkari, Krueger | These prices need sharper catalysts than reputation alone. |
Liquidity makes fresh information more powerful than the headline suggests
The market has $27.85 million in volume, $761,620 in liquidity, and $119,180 in open interest. That mix matters because the large historical footprint can make the hierarchy look well-established, while current liquidity is the practical channel through which fresh information must be absorbed. A draw release, official withdrawal, medical update, or on-court result during the tournament window can reshape prices faster than the headline volume alone implies.
Settlement also narrows the information that counts. The rules point to the official Wimbledon outcome, so disputes about form, rankings, or popularity only matter if they change the route to lifting the trophy. That pushes the market toward concrete, verifiable catalysts as July 12 approaches.
The strongest counter-signal is how little the leader can control
The main challenge to the market-implied hierarchy is that a Wimbledon title requires a sequence of single-match outcomes on a surface where small timing gaps can decide service games and tiebreaks. This matters most for the top price: a favorite can command the highest individual price and still have limited control over bracket congestion, opponent spikes, and physical durability across two weeks.
That counter-signal is visible inside the odds themselves. Sabalenka leads, but three named players clear 9%, six more sit between roughly 3.7% and 7.1%, and the tail contains several names priced as low-probability but eligible outcomes under the market rules. The board’s shape therefore depends on a fragile balance: continuity at the top must outlast the event-specific volatility that Wimbledon can produce.


